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CIVIL WAR RECORD 



OF 



BROWN UNIVERSITY 



COMPILED BY ■ 
Brevet Major HENRY S. BURRAGE, D. D., 
CLASS OF 1861. 



PROVIDENCE, R. I 
1920. 



■ITS F- 






LET US HAVB IfAITH THAT RIGHT MAKES MIGHT, AND IN THAT 
PAITH I.ET US DARE lO DO OUR DUTY AS WE UNDERSTAND IT. — Abraham 

Lincoln, in an address in Cooper Institute, New York, February 27, 1860. 



FOREWORD. 



The compiler of this Record, early in 1868, published a volume 
of three hundred and eighty pages entitled Brown University in 
the Civil War. In it were included biographies of twenty-one of 
the graduates and non-graduates of the University who died in 
that war, and also the record of the two hundred and ninety-four 
of the graduates and non-graduates who served in the Union 
army or navy in the Civil War period. 

In the Brown Alumni Monthly for April, 1915, attention was 
called to a noteworthy gift received by the L,ibrary of the Univer- 
sity from Mr. Bertram Smith, of Berkeley, California (class of 
1910). It was a typewritten compilation, covering one hundred 
pages, containing references to Brown University graduates and 
non-graduates in the Official Records of the Union and Confederate 
Armies in the Civil War— that monumental work comprising one 
hundred and thirty volumes, published under the direction of suc- 
cessive Secretaries of War until its completion under Secretary 
Elihu Root in 1901. It was a happy thought that led Mr. Smith 
(even with the aid of the invaluable index volume of 1242 pages, 
recording every name in these one hundred and thirty volumes) 
to make the extended search which his plan required. As Mr. 
Smith remarked in his introduction, the material thus secured 
added little to what was already known concerning the services of 
Brown University graduates and non-graduates in the Civil War. 
Its great value was in calling attention to quite a large number of 



VI FOREWORD. 

Brown men who had a part in that war on the Union or Confed- 
erate side, but whose services had not found mention in our 
University war records. 

The list thus compiled contained one hundred and ninety- 
seven names. Of these, seventeen had no other connection with 
the University than as the recipients of honorary degrees. Major 
General Burnside was one of the seventeen; but of course such 
recognition of honorable service was not sufficient to give him a 
place among Brown University graduates or non-graduates in the 
Civil War. Of the one hundred and eighty other persons men- 
tioned by Mr. Smith thirty had no military service in that war, 
and accordingly their names had no place in a record of such 
service. One of the thirty was Francis Wayland, who, in the 
Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies (Volume IV, 
Series III, page 1246), is mentioned as one of the incorporators of 
the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers; but mention 
of a call to such honorable service even would not entitle the ven- 
erable ex-president of the University to a place in a record among 
those who were enrolled in the military service during the Civil 
War. 

Then, in this list taken from the Official Records, there were 
eighty-three names of graduates and non-graduates of Brown who 
were mentioned in the memorial volume. Brown University in the 
Civil War, published in 1868; so that these eighty-three names 
were not a new contribution to the roll of Brown University grad- 
ates and non-graduates who were in the military service, on one 
side or the other, in the battle years 1861-1865. But even with 
the elimination of these names there were still left sixty-seven 
names, taken from the Official Records^ which are not recorded in 
the roll prepared at the close of the Civil War. 



FOREWORD. VII 

Other names also, not appearing in that roll, but belonging 
to it, the writer of these lines had obtained from various sources 
since the publication of Brown University in the Civil War; and 
Mr. Smith's discovery became now the suggestion of bringing 
together the names of these men preparatory to a search for the 
record of their military service. Such a list was made with the 
assistance of the keeper of the Graduate Records of the Univer- 
sity; and the seventy-three names thus secured, added to Mr. 
Smith's sixty-seven, made a total of one hundred and forty names. 

The task of obtaining the Civil War record of these men was 
divided between Mr. Smith and myself, he to make an effort to 
obtain the war service of the men whose names he had secured, 
and I to make an effort to ascertain the war service of those whose 
names were on my list. After some time, because of the difl&cul- 
ties encountered in obtaining the information desired, Mr. Smith 
relinquished his endeavor, and I took upon myself the whole of 
the work. 

The task was not an easy one. Many whose names were in 
the two lists had died, not a few long ago, indeed so long ago 
that little information concerning their part in the war could be 
secured, while of some no evidence was ascertainable that at any 
time they had a part in the war on either side. This difficulty 
was greatest in case of those graduates or non-graduates who 
resided in the South. 

Accordingly, I have not found it possible to make the Civil 
War service of the graduates and non-graduates of the University 
as complete as I desired. In the limit that has been reached, 
however, sufficient information was discovered to increase the roll 
of Brown University men in the Civil War from two hundred and 
ninety-four, as recorded in 1868, to four hundred and seventeen. 



VIII FOREWORD. 

and the number of those who died in the service from twenty-one 
to thirty-nine. 

In the new Record are included the names of the graduates 
and non-graduates of the University who served in the Confeder- 
ate army. The roll in Brown University in the Civil War was the 
record of the men of the University whose service in that war had 
been pro libertateet pro ReipubliccB integritate} But a great change 
had been manifested in the intervening years. The bitterness of 
the war-period, also of the period following the war for some time, 
had now given place to a spirit of love and devotion to the one 
common country, which happily the war left to us. Especially 
was this change made to appear at the time of the Spanish- Amer- 
ican War, and more recently in the great World War. General 
E. P. Alexander, who fired the guns at Gettysburg which opened 
upon the Union lines preceding what is commonly known as 
Pickett's Charge, used the following words in the introduction to 
his Military Memories of a Confederate, published in 1902: "The 
world has not stood still in the years since we took up arms for 
what we deemed our most invaluable right — that of self govern- 
ment. We now enjoy the rare privilege of seeing what we fought 
for in the retrospect. It no longer seems desirable. It would 
now prove only a curse. We have good cause to thank God for 
our escape from it, not alone for ourselves, but for that of the 
whole country and even of the world." With such words on 
record, and many others from a similar source that have long 
been familiar, the time certainly had come for a recognition of 
the change which the years had wrought since the Civil War. 
Accordingly, it seemed desirable that search should be made for 
the record of our graduates and non-graduates who served in the 

^ From the inscription on the tablet in Manning Hall by Professor John 
ly. Lincoln. 



FOREWORD IX 

Confederate army or navy. The Civil War records in the South- 
ern States have not been as carefully preserved as were those in 
the Union States. Such as remain are now in the War Depart- 
ment at Washington, and these, as required, have been used; but 
I am especially indebted to many willing helpers in the South, 
who have rendered valuable service when search was requested. 

At a meeting of the corporation of the University, October 
15, 1919, the writer of these lines had the pleasure of reporting to 
his associates the results of these later labors. In so doing he 
stated that this new Civil War Record is still incomplete because 
of the difficulty of obtaining any information concerning Civil 
War service at a date so remote from that great crisis in our 
national history. But the number of missing names must be 
small; and with an expression of gratitude that his years had 
been lengthened out so as to make it possible for him to record 
the memory of the services of these other sons of his alma mater, 
he presented his manuscript Record to the corporation, closing 
his remarks with the mention of the noteworthy fact that there 
were still in the membership of the corporation, and present on 
that day, four other graduates of Brown, also survivors of the 
Civil War, namely, Messrs Keen and Porter of the Board of Fel- 
lows, and Messrs. Douglas and Lapham of the Board of Trustees. 
In the action that followed with reference to the publication of 
the Record, it was the happy suggestion of one of the Trustees 
that these four survivors should be associated with the compiler 
in the work of publication , and it was so ordered . Such assist- 
ance has been helpfully rendered. 

At the dedication of the Civil War Memorial Tablet in Man- 
ning Hall, September 4, 1866, Professor J. L,. Diman made men- 
tion of the significance of such a memorial in such a place, incul- 



X FOREWORD. 

eating visibly and most impressively the lesson that study is not 
an end in itself, but looks to larger results than mere academic 
success, and he referred to the gratifying response made to calls 
of duty in the Civil War by the graduates and non-graduates of 
all of our higher institutions of learning. "It is safe to afl&rm," 
he said, ' 'that no one class of the American people was represented 
in so liberal a ratio as the very class whose training had been 
decried as tending to keep them at a distance from the questions 
of the day. And in this respect our experience has been the 
experience of those before us. In that matchless eulogy which 
Pericles pronounced at the beginning of the Peloponnesian War, 
he proudly claimed that Athens had lost nothing in the cultiva- 
vation of those arts to which she owed her highest fame; and we, 
too, looking back on our record, remembering the readiness with 
which so many of our educated youth made sacrifice of the hopes 
of years, recognizing the conspicuous ability so often shown in 
the novel and arduous positions to which they were summoned, 
bewailing, alas, what may not even now be mentioned without 
renewing in the hearts of some here present a grief too sacred and 
too recent to be disturbed, may repeat with added emphasis the 
words of the great Athenian orator, 'We have not been enfeebled 
by philosophy.' " How impressively in the recent World War 
was this old-time truth repeated and emphasized in the great 
uprising that immediately followed in all of our colleges and uni- 
versities ! Again, too, the response of the graduates and non- 
graduates of Brown was worthy of the best traditions of the 
University. So may it ever be ! 

Kennebunkport, Maine, April 2, 1920. 



THE ROLL. 



CI.ASS OF 1825 

George W. Patten. Brevet Second Lieutenant, Second 
Infantry, United States Army, July 1, 1830; First I,ieutenant, 
February 13, 1837; Captain, June 18, 1846; wounded — lost right 
hand — at the battle of Cerro Gordo, April 18, 1847; Brevet Major, 
April 18, 1847; Major, Ninth Infantry, April 30, 1861; Lieuten- 
ant Colonel, Second Infantry, June 7, 1862; retired from active 
service, February 17, 1864. 

CLASS OF 1826 

George W. Hathaway. Chaplain, Nineteenth Maine Vol- 
unteers, June 13, 1863; mustered out of service with regiment, 
May 31, 1865; served in Virginia and Pennsylvania. 

CLASS OF 1829 

John A. Bolles. Captain and additional Aide-de-Camp on 
the staff of Major General John A. Dix, February, 1862; Major 
and Provost Judge at Fortress Monroe, June 20, 1862; Judge 
Advocate, Seventh Army Corps, September 3, 1862; Brevet Lieu- 
tentant Colonel, March 13, 1865; Brevet Colonel, July, 1865; 
Brevet Brigadier General, May, 1866; resigned, July, 1865, and 
appointed Solicitor and Naval Judge Advocate. 

Benoni Carpenter. Surgeon, Twelth Rhode Island Vol- 
unteers, October 5, 1862; Surgeon, Eleventh United States Heavy 
Artillery (colored), September 5, 1863; Medical Director and 
Inspector of the District of Carrollton, Louisiana, June 18, 1864; 
mustered out of service with regiment, October 2, 1865. 

Elisha Dyer. Captain, Company B, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 



2 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

CLASS OF 1830 
Francis J. Lippitt. Colonel, Second California Volunteers, 
August 23, 1861; in command of the Northern District of Cali- 
fornia from January, 1862, till July, 1863; mustered out of serv- 
ice, October 11, 1864; Brevet Brigadier General, United States 
Volunteers, March 13, 1865. 

CLASS OF 1832 

John B. White. Chaplain, One Hundred and Seventeenth 
Illinois Volunteers, August 4, 1864; mustered out of service, 
July, 1865. 

CLASS OF 1834 

Thomas M. Potter. Assistant Surgeon, United States 
Navy, October 17, 1839; Passed Assistant Surgeon, January 22, 
1848; Surgeon, July 13, 1853; served on the Niagara, Roanoke, 
Cumberland and Santee. 

CLASS OF 1835 
Levi H. Holden. Assistant Surgeon, United States Army, 
June 15, 1840; Major and Surgeon, April 23, 1860; Brevet Lieu- 
tenant Colonel, March 13, 1865; served as Medical Director, and 
was stationed during the war at Cincinnati, Ohio. 

CLASS OF 1836 

Foster Hartwell. Chaplain, One Hundred and Twenti- 
eth New York Volunteers, August 22, 1862; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service, December 10, 1863. 

CLASS OF 1837 

Charles K. Newcomb. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Charles R. Train. Captain and Assistant Quartermaster, 
United States Volunteers, September 4, 1862; served on the staff 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 3 

of Brigadier General George H, Gordon; served in Maryland and 
Virginia; mustered out of service, November 6, 1862. 

CIvASS OF 1838 
Francis Leland. Surgeon, Second Massachusetts Volun- 
teers, October 11, 1861; wounded at Cedar Mountain, Virginia, 
August 9, 1862; resigned, October 24, 1862. 

Isaac G. Wilson. Enrolled, September 6, 1861, at Geneva, 
Illinois; Colonel of the Fifty-second Illinois Volunteers, Novem- 
ber 19, 1861; resigned, December 6, 1861. 

CLASS OF 1839 

RuFus Coffin. First Lieutenant, United States Revenue 
Service, August 21, 1861; resigned on account of illness in the 
summer of 1863. 

Joseph S. Pitman. Lieutenant Colonel, First Rhode Island 
Volunteers, April 18, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, August 2, 1861. 

James B. M. Potter. Additional Paymaster, United States 
Army, June 1, 1861; Major and Paymaster, July 15, 1864; Brevet 
Lieutenant Colonel, March 13, 1865; remained in the service. 

James R. Stone. Captain, Company I, Tenth New Jersey 
Volunteers, March 15, 1862; Captain, Veteran Reserve Corps, 
August 24, 1863; Brevet Major, September 26, 1865; mustered 
out of service, January 1, 1868. 

CLASS OF 1840 

Obil W. Briggs. Chaplain, Ninth Illinois Cavalry, Octo- 
ber 26, 1861; honorably mustered out of service in orders dated 
February 23, 1863. 

George H. Browne. Colonel, Twelfth Rhode Island Vol- 
unteers, September 18, 1862; served in Virginia and Kentucky; 
mustered out of service with regiment, July 29, 1863. 



4 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

Thorndike C. Jameson. Chaplain, Second Rhode Island 
Volunteers, June 11, 1861; Major, December 13, 1862; resigned, 
January 8, 1863; Major, Fifth Rhode Island Heavy Artillery, 
March 2, 1863; served in Virginia and North Carolina; mustered 
out of service, February 2, 1865. 

Henry S. Newcomb. Midshipman, United States Navy, 
July 21, 1838; Passed Midshipman; Lieutenant, June 28, 1853; 
Lieutenant Commander; Commander, September, 1862; served in 
the South Atlantic and East Gulf Blockading Squadron; died, 
October 24, 1863. 

Elisha F. Watson. Chaplain, Eleventh Massachusetts Vol- 
unteers, June 13, 1861; served in the Army of the Potomac until 
February 24, 1864, and was subsequently an acting Chaplain of 
the Seventh Rhode Island Volunteers. 

CLASS OF 1841 

William M. Hale. Captain, Co. I, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; Lieutenant Colonel, August 11, 1862; 
served in the defenses of Washington; mustered out with regi- 
ment, September 1, 1862. 

Origen S. Jewett. Major, Thirty-eighth Alabama Infan- 
try, May 15, 1862; killed in action in the battle of Chickamauga, 
September 19, 1863. 

Augustus Mason. Assistant Surgeon, Forty-third Massa- 
chusetts Volunteers, November 5, 1862; Acting Surgeon, Fifty- 
first Massachusetts Volunteers, November, 1862, at Newport, 
North Carolina; returned to the Forty-third Regiment, December 
6, 1862; again Acting Surgeon of the Fifty-first Regiment; in 
charge of Galloupe Field Hospital, Charleston Expedition; re- 
signed, March 17, 1863. 

John M. Thayer. Colonel, First Nebraska Volunteers, 
June 13, 1861; Brigadier General, United States Volunteers, Octo- 
ber 4, 1862; served in Missouri, and under General Grant in 
Kentucky, Tennessee and Mississippi; in the fall of 1863 was 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 5 

transferred to the Department of Arkansas, and assigned to the 
command of the Army of the Frontier; Brevet Major General, 
United States Volunteers; resigned, July 19, 1865. 

CLASS OF 1842 

Edwin Metcalf. Major, Third Rhode Island Heavy Artil- 
lery, August 27, 1861; resigned, August 4, 1862; Colonel, Elev- 
enth Rhode Island Volunteers, September 15, 1862; Colonel, 
Third Heavy Artillery, November 11, 1862; resigned, February 
5, 1864. 

CLASS OF 1843 

Tracy P. Cheever. Captain, Thirty-fifth Massachusetts 
Volunteers, August 13, 1862; served in Maryland and Virginia; 
mustered out, June 23, 1863, on account of wounds received at 
the battle of Antietam, September 17, 1862. 

Robert B. Hilton. Captain, Company D, First Regiment 
Florida Infantry, April 5, 1861; member of Confederate Congress. 

Lewis Richmond. Private, Company C, First Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 2, 1861; mustered out of service with regiment, 
August 2, 1861; Captain and Assistant Adjutant General, United 
States Volunteers, on staff of Major General Burnside, September 
13, 1861; Major, April 28, 1862; Lieutenant Colonel, July 22, 
1862; Brevet Colonel, August 1, 1864; Brevet Brigadier General, 
March 13, 1865. 

Abram Van Buren. First Lieutenant and Adjutant, Twen- 
ty-sixth Missouri Volunteers, January 17, 1862; served in Mis- 
souri; resigned, April 26, 1862. 

CLASS OF 1844 

Lewis H. Boutell. Major, Forty-fifth Missouri Volun- 
teers; mustered out of service, March 7, 1865.* 

Francis C. Johnson. Private, Company K, First Florida 
Reserves, August 23, 1864; soon after appointed Chaplain of 



6 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

forces under General J.J. Dickinson, at Waldo, Florida, his serv- 
ice closing at the end of the war. 

E. Porter King. Captain, Company G, Fourth Alabama 
Infantry, April 22, 1861. After serving a year in the Army of 
Northern Virginia, he was recalled to his post as Circuit Judge 
and resigned his army commission. 

WiLLARD Sayles. Major, First Rhode Island Cavalry, Sep- 
tember 27, 1861; Lieutenant Colonel, February 21, 1862; resigned, 
July 7, 1862; Colonel, Third Rhode Island Cavalry, July 1, 1863; 
served in Virginia and in the Department of the Gulf; mustered 
out of service with regiment, November 29, 1865. 

CLASS OF 1845 

James E. Bell. First Lieutenant, Company B, Sixth Vir- 
ginia Infantry, April, 1861; mustered out May 1, 1862; Assist- 
ant Surgeon, Thirty-seventh Georgia Infantry, September 14, 
1862, and later served in hospitals at Opelika, Alabama, and Lou- 
don, Tennessee. 

Cornelius Kollock. Served in the Army of Northern 
Virginia as Surgeon of the Eighth South Carolina Infantry in 
1861 and 1862. 

CLASS OF 1846 

Sanford R. Gifford, Private, Seventh Nev/ York Volun- 
teers, April, 1861; served in Maryland and Virginia; mustered 
out of service with his regiment. Twice again during the war he 
went to the field with his regiment. 

William Goddard. Major, First Rhode Island Volunteers, 
June 27, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered out of service with 
regiment, August 2, 1861; Major by special order and Volunteer 
Aide on staff of Major General Burnside at the battle of Fred- 
ericksburg, Virginia, December 11, 1862; Brevet Lieutenant 
Colonel; Brevet Colonel, United States Volunteers, March 13, 
1865. 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 7 

William W. Pearce. Corporal, First Light Battery, Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; Sergeant; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service with battery, August 6, 1861. 

CLASS OF 1847 

Thomas S. Anthony. First Lieutenant, First Rhode Island 
Light Artillery, March 17, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service, October 15, 1862. 

James P. Boyce. Chaplain, Sixteenth South Carolina Infan- 
try, December, 1861. Later he served as Aide-de-Camp on the 
staff of Governor Magrath of South Carolina, and also as Acting 
Provost Marshal of Columbia, South Carolina, when it was occu- 
pied by General Sherman. 

Albert H. Campbell. Captain, Confederate Engineers, 
June 6, 1862; Major, October 19, 1864; in charge of the topo- 
graphical department of the Army of Northern Virginia. 

Frederic Denison. Chaplain, First Rhode Island Cavalry, 
November 7, 1861; resigned, January 19, 1863; Chaplain, Third 
Rhode Island Heavy Artillery, January 20, 1863; mustered out, 
October 5, 1864, at expiration of service. 

Joshua J. Ellis. Assistant Surgeon, Thirty-seventh Mas- 
sachusetts Volunteers, August 18, 1862; served in Virginia; 
resigned, March 10, 1863; died, March 17, 1863. 

James Harris. Assistant Surgeon, First Rhode Island Vol- 
unteers, April 17, 1861; mustered out, August 2, 1861; Surgeon, 
Seventh Rhode Island Volunteers, August 18, 1862; Medical 
Inspector, Second Division, Ninth Army Corps, October 19, 1864; 
Medical Director, Ninth Army Corps, May 29, 1865; Brevet 
Lieutenant Colonel, November 24, 1865, to date from March 13, 
1865. 

Walter H. Judson. Second Lieutenant, Thirteenth Mas- 
sachusetts Volunteers, July 16, 1861; served in Virginia; a pris- 
oner at Richmond, Virginia, November, 1862; died at New 
Haven, Connecticut, March 10, 1863. 



8 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

Timothy Newhall. Surgeon, First Rhode Island Cavalry, 
November 1, 1861; served in Virginia; resigned, May 23, 1862. 

CLASS OF 1848 

Fayette Clapp. Surgeon on staff of Major General Fre- 
mont, November, 1861; Regimental Surgeon, December, 1861, 
and ordered to Jefferson City on hospital duty; resigned, 1862; 
Surgeon, United States steamer Marmora, December, 1862; died, 
September, 1864. 

Joseph B. Clark. Captain, Eleventh New Hampshire 
Volunteers, August 21, 1862; wounded at the battle of the Wil- 
derness, May 6, 1864; served in Virginia, Kentucky, Mississippi 
and Tennessee; mustered out of service with regiment, June 4, 
1865. 

Austin S. Cushman. Second Lieutenant, Third Massachu- 
setts Volunteers, April 23, 1861; Adjutant, April 29, 1861; 
served in Virginia; mustered out of service with regiment, July 
21, 1861; Major, Forty-seventh Massachusetts Volunteers, Novem- 
ber 7, 1862; served in the Department of the Gulf; mustered out 
of service with regiment, September 1, 1863. 

Thomas H. Johnson. Captain, Third South Carolina Cav- 
alry, January 27, 1862; Lieutenant Colonel, August 21, 1862; on 
the field and staff of the regiment, July and August, 1864; cap- 
tured near Greensboro, North Carolina, April 11, 1865; took the 
oath of allegiance, April 12, 1865. 

John H. Tucker. Captain, Seventh South Carolina Cav- 
alry, May 5, 1861, and served in South Carolina and Virginia; 
resigned, February 7, 1865, on account of ill health, and returned 
to South Carolina. 

William B. Weeden. Lieutenant, First Rhode Island 
Light Artillery, June 6, 1861; Captain, August 8, 1861; served 
in Virginia; resigned, July 21, 1862. 



OP BROWN UNIVERSITY. 9 

CLASS OF 1849 

William R. Brownell. Surgeon, Twelfth Connecticut 
Volunteers, October 7, 1861; May, 1862, on staff of Major Gen- 
eral Butler; July, 1862, on duty at St. James' General Hospital, 
New Orleans, Louisiana; August, 1863, Medical Director, La 
Fourche District, Louisiana; December, 1863, Division Surgeon, 
First Division, Nineteenth Army Corps, August, 1864; Decem- 
ber, 1864, appointed Staff Surgeon, United States Army; served 
in Louisiana and Virginia; resigned, April, 1865. 

Julian Hartridge. First Lieutenant, Chatham Artillery, 
Savannah, Georgia, August 1, 1861; resigned, March 27, 1862, 
and became a member of the Confederate Congress. 

Lloyd Morton. Surgeon, Ninth Rhode Island Volunteers, 
May 26, 1862; served in Virgina; mustered out of service with 
regiment, September, 1862. 

Alexander J. Robert. Private, Company E, Fourth 
Georgia Infantry, April 28, 1861; Sergeant, May 10, 1861; Sec- 
ond Lieutenant, 1861; Adjutant, August, 1862; was with his 
command on August 31, 1864, but the Georgia Soldier Roster 
Commission has no further record of his service. 

Isaac N. Tourtellote. Private, Company D, Second 
Rhode Island Volunteers, October 14, 1862; served in Virginia; 
discharged at Elmira, New York, April, 1865, from Company A, 
Nineteenth Veteran Reserve Corps. 

Adin B. Underwood. Captain, Second Massachusetts Vol- 
unteers, May 24, 1861; Major, Thirty-third Massachusetts Volun- 
teers, July 11, 1862; Lieutenant Colonel, July 24, 1862; Colonel, 
April 3, 1863; wounded at Lookout Mountain, Tennessee, Octo- 
ber 29, 1863; Brigadier General, United States Volunteers, Jan- 
uary 22, 1864; Brevet Major General, United States Volunteers, 
August 13, 1865; President of Court Martial at Washington, May 
to September, 1865; mustered out of service, September 1, 1865. 

H. Lincoln Wayland. Chaplain, Seventh Connecticut 
Volunteers, September 18, 1861; served in the Department of 
the South; mustered out of service, January 7, 1864. 



10 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

CLASS OF 1850 

James Brown. Captain, Thirty-third Massachusetts Vol- 
unteers, July 31, 1862; Major, November 29, 1862; served in 
Virginia; mustered out of service. May 11, 1863. 

Robert Hall. Private, Company E, Fifty-fifth Virginia 
Infantry, July 24, 1861; Corporal, October, 1863, and later lyieu- 
tenant; mentioned in General Orders, Adjutant and Inspector 
General's Office, Richmond, Virginia, October 3, 1863, for gal- 
lantry in the battle of Chancellorsville. 

Henry F. I^ane. Chaplain Forty-first Massachusetts Vol- 
unteers, November 4, 1862; served in the Department of the 
Gulf; mustered out of service, August 25, 1863. 

Edward L,. Pierce. Private, Company L,, Third Massa- 
chusetts Volunteers, April 16, 1861; served in Virginia. While 
the regiment was at Fortress Monroe, having charge of work 
in behalf of escaped slaves at Hampton, he wrote an article for 
the: Atlantic Monthly (November, 1861) entitled The Contrabands 
at Fort Monroe, in which he suggested the possibility of arming 
the negroes for service in the Union army. He was mustered out 
with regiment, July 22, 1861. 

Charles P. Price. Corporal, Company H, One Hundred 
and Fifty-ninth New York Volunteers, November 1, 1862; Ser- 
geant, January 21, 1863; Second L,ieutenant, January 27, 1863; 
died April 17, 1863, at Brashear City, Louisiana, of wounds 
received at Irish Bend, Louisiana, April 14, 1863. He served in 
the Third Brigade, Grover's Division, Nineteenth Army Corps. 

CLASS OF 1851 

Francis W. Bird. Captain, Company C, Eleventh North 
Carolina Infantry, June 23, 1863; Major, July 3, 1863; Lieuten- 
ant Colonel; killed at Reams Station, Virginia, August 24, 1864. 

Emmons P. Bond, Private, Fourteenth Connecticut Volun- 
teers, September, 1864; Chaplain, October 12, 1864; served in 
Virginia; resigned. May 5, 1865. 



OP BROWN UNIVERSITY. 11 

Luther F. Humeston. Contract Surgeon, United States 
Army, October 13, 1864; served as such until the close of the war. 
Major General Gordon Granger, commanding the Thirteenth 
Army Corps, in a General Field Order, March 18, 1865, in a list 
of officers on duty at his headquarters, mentions "Acting Staff 
Surgeon, ly. F. Humeston, U. S. Army," as "Acting Medical 
Inspector. ' ' 

James B. Jordan. In his record in the General Catalogue 
of Brown University is the following: "Confederate military serv- 
ice, colonel or major. From Forestville, N. C; born in 1831; 
killed in battle 1862." Added inquiries of the president of the 
University of North Carolina and of the North Carolina Histor- 
ical Commission having in charge the Civil War records of North 
Carolina regiments have added the following from "Sketches of 
the History of the University of North Carolina together with a 
Catalogue of Officers and Students, 1789-1889," compiled and 
edited by Mrs. Cornelia P. Spencer, page 157: "Jordan, James 
B., Bertie Co., 1855-56. A. B. Brown Univ. I^awyer, C. S. A. 
Born, 1831. Died in service, 1862." On this information it 
seems proper to include his name among those graduates of the 
service who died while engaged in military service in the Civil 
War. 

Antoine J. Mauran. Assistant Surgeon, Third New York 
Infantry, October 29, 1862; served later as Acting Assistant Sur- 
geon, United States Army. 

Frederic Mott. Quartermaster, Thirty-ninth Iowa Vol- 
unteers, September 14, 1862; Adjutant from the spring of 1863 
to December, 1864; Assistant Adjutant General, United States 
Army, December, 1864; Third Brigade, Fourth Division, Fif- 
teenth Army Corps, January 1, 1865; mustered out of service, 
July 10, 1865. 

Frank Wheaton. First I,ieutenant, Fourth Cavalry, United 
States Army, March 3, 1855; Captain, March 1, 1861; Lieuten- 
ant Colonel, Second Rhode Island Volunteers, July, 1861; Colonel, 



12 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

July 22, 1861; Brigadier General, United States Volunteers, No- 
vember 29, 1862; Major, Second Cavalry, United States Army, 
November 5, 1863; Brevet Lieutenant Colonel, United States 
Army, May 5, 1864; Brevet Major General, United States Volun- 
teers, October 19, 1864; Brevet Colonel, United States Army, 
October 19, 1864; Brevet Brigadier General, United States 
Army, March 13, 1865; Brevet Major General, United States 
Army, March 13, 1865; Lieutenant Colonel, Thirty-ninth Infan- 
try, United States Army, July 28, 1866; served in Maryland and 
Virginia; continued in the service. 

CLASS OF 1852 

Sullivan Ballou. Major, Second Rhode Island Volun- 
teers, June 11, 1861; served in Virginia; died near Sudley Church, 
Virginia, July 26, 1861, of wounds received at the battle of Bull 
Run, July 21, 1861. 

James E. Brown. Corporal, Company F, Twenty-fifth 
Wisconsin Volunteers, September 14, 1862; died in regimental 
hospital at Helena, Arkansas, November 4, 1863. 

Miles J. Fletcher. Aide-de-Camp to Governor Oliver P. 
Morton of Illinois, from April, 1861. As Aide he was useful in 
many ways, organizing troops and in caring for them after they 
left the State. While hastening with the Governor to the relief 
of the wounded after the battle of Shiloh, he was instantly killed 
in a railroad accident. May 10, 1862. 

Henry Clay Hart. Captain, Fifteenth Alabama Infantry 
Regiment, July 30, 1861, and served in battles in the peninsula 
campaign of 1862, closing with the battle of Malvern Hill; mus- 
tered out on account of disability. 

Darwin E. Maxson. Chaplain, Eighty-fifth New York 
Volunteers, December 2, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered out, 
June 23, 1862. 

Charles H. Parkhurst. Captain, Eleventh Rhode Island 
Volunteers, September 19, 1862; Lieutenant Colonel, Third 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY, 13 

Rhode Island Cavalry, August 31, 1863; served in the Depart- 
ment of the Gulf; resigned. May 26, 1865. 

Charles B. Randall. Second Lieutenant, Twelfth New 
York Volunteers, May 13, 1861; Captain, September 25, 1861; 
mustered out of service with regiment. May 17, 1863; Major, One 
Hundred and Forty-ninth New York Volunteers, March 17, 1863; 
I,ieutenant Colonel, June 5, 1863; wounded at Gettysburg, Penn- 
sylvania, July, 1863; killed before Atlanta, Georgia, July 20, 
1864. 

Melancthon Storrs. Surgeon, Eighth Connecticut Vol- 
unteers, October 5, 1861; mustered out of service with regiment, 
October 6, 1864; Contract Surgeon, United States Army, from 
October 7, 1864, to July 17, 1865. 

Clarendon Waite. Private, February 18, 1864; served in 
North Carolina; mustered out of service. May 20, 1864. 

IvUCius A. Wheelock. Second lyieutenant, Company A, 
Forty-third Massachusetts Volunteers, November 10, 1862; served 
in North Carolina; mustered out of service with regiment, July 
30, 1863. 

Joseph C. Wightman. Chaplain, Twenty-fourth Connect- 
icut Volunteers, November 18, 1862; mustered out with regiment 
at expiration of service. 

CLASS OF 1853 

Frank S. Bradford. Assistant Surgeon, First Regiment 
Rhode Island Artillery, November 14, 1861; in June, 1862, tem- 
porarily attached to the Eighty-second New York Volunteers; 
resigned and mustered out, July 19, 1862. 

OsBORN E. Bright. Sergeant Major, Twenty-second New 
York Volunteers, June 28, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 15, 1862. 

Henry W. Diman. Acting Assistant Paymaster, United 
States Navy, January 14, 1862; served in the West Gulf Blockad- 
ing Squadron; resigned, August 13, 1862. 



14 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

George A. Crocker. First I,ieutenant, Company E, Fifth 
New York Cavalry, September 11, 1861; Adjutant, Sixth New 
York Cavalry, November 11, 1861; Captain, Company A, June 
27, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out. May 15, 1865. 

George D. Henderson. Chaplain, United States Navy, 
July 2, 1864; served in the North Atlantic Blockading Squadron; 
ordered to the Naval Academy, September 12, 1864; detached, 
December 20, 1865; remained in the service. 

Charles H. Henshaw. Captain, Company K, One Hun- 
dredth New York Volunteers, October, 1861; served in Virginia; 
resigned, August, 1862. 

Edward P. Lawton. Member of the Chatham Artillery, 
Savannah, Georgia, May, 1861; Captain and Assistant Adjutant 
General, August 15, 1861; served in Virginia on the staff of his 
brother. Brigadier General A. R. Lawton. In the summer of 
1862, at the battles of Gaines Mills and Malvern Hill, he com- 
manded the Thirty-first and Thirty-eighth Georgia regiments. 
At the battle of Fredericksburg, Virginia, December 13, 1862, he 
was mortally wounded, and as a prisoner he was taken to the 
United States Hospital at Alexandria, where he died, December 
26, 1862. 

Leonard B. Pratt. Second lyieutenant. First Rhode Island 
Cavalry, December, 1861; Quartermaster, First Battalion; First 
Lieutenant and Regimental Commissary, November 1, 1863; 
served in Maryland and Virginia; mustered out of service, 
December 14, 1864. 

George H. Woods. First Lieutenant, First Minnesota 
Volunteers, April 29, 1861; Acting Regimental Quartermaster, 
July 3, 1861; Chief Quartermaster, Corps of Observation, Briga- 
dier Charles P. Stone, commanding; Captain and Commissary of 
Subsistence, November 16, 1861; Second Corps, April, 1862; 
Lieutenant Colonel and Chief Commissary of Subsistence, Third 
Corps, January 1, 1863; Sheridan's Cavalry Corps, March 28, 
1864; President of Board of Examination for Officers of the Sub- 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 15 

sistence Department, December, 1864; mustered out of service, 
June 11, 1865. 

CLASS OF 1854 

Charles H. Boyd. Received an appointment in the United 
States Coast Survey service soon after graduation; in the sum- 
mer of 1861 was on the United States steamer Arago in Passama- 
quoddy Bay, Maine, and was sent from there to participate in the 
Port Royal Expedition; served on the staff of Admiral Du Pont; 
in 1862, was with General Barnard in the defenses of Washington, 
D. C; in 1863, was with Colonel W. F. Reynolds, United States 
Engineers, in the defenses of Baltimore; in December, 1863, re- 
ported to General W. L. Elliott, commanding Cavalry Corps, 
Army of the Cumberland, as Captain of Topographical Engi- 
neers, but was soon transferred to the staff of Major General 
George H. Thomas and remained on his staff until November, 
1865, the latter part of the time as Major of Topographical Engi- 
neers; served in South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, District of 
Columbia, Maryland, Virginia and Tennessee. 

Frank W. Cheney. Lieutenant Colonel, Sixteenth Con- 
necticut Volunteers, August 15, 1862; wounded at the battle of 
Antietam, September 17, 1862; served in Virginia and Maryland; 
mustered out on account of wounds, December 24, 1862. 

Alexander W. Couper. Private, Company A, Sixteenth 
Georgia Infantry, January, 1863; transferred to the staff of Gen- 
eral Clement A. Evans, June, 1863, and served in the Army of 
Northern Virginia to the close of the war. 

Arthur F. Dexter. Captain, First Rhode Island Volun- 
teers, May 2, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered out of service 
with regiment, August 2, 1861; on staff of Brigadier General 
Tyler, April, 1862; resigned, 

John A. Duvillard. Second Lieutenant, Twelfth United 
States Infantry, Company H, October 24, 1861; First Lieutenant, 
Company F, August 11, 1862; is mentioned in the Official Records 



16 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

of the Union and Confederate Armies as in the second Bull Run 
battle, Antietam and Fredericksburg; died at Fort Hamilton, 
New York, May 5, 1865. 

William G. Ely. Lieutenant Colonel, Sixth Connecticut 
Volunteers, September 4, 1861; Colonel Eighteenth Connecticut 
Volunteers, July 24, 1862; served in South Carolina and Virginia; 
captured at Winchester, Virginia, June, 1863; wounded at Lynch- 
burg, June 18, 1864; discharged on account of wounds, Septem- 
ber 18, 1864; Brevet Brigadier General, United States Volunteers, 
March 13, 1865. 

Francis W. Goddard. Private, Company C, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; Captain (carbineers), June 27, 
1861; served in Virginia; mustered out of service with regiment, 
August 2, 1861. 

Thomas P. Ives. Lieutenant, United States Revenue Serv- 
ice, May 15, 1861; resigned, November 6, 1861; in command of 
steamer Picket, Burnside's flagship, December 2, 1861; resigned. 
May 12, 1862; Acting Master, United States Navy, September 3, 
1862; Acting Volunteer Lieutenant, May 26, 1863; assigned to 
duty in the Ordnance Bureau, December 3, 1863; Acting Volun- 
teer Commander, November 7, 1864; January 26, 1865, relieved 
from duty on account of ill health with permission to travel 
abroad; died at Havre, France, November 17, 1865. 

George C. de Marini. Sergeant, First Rhode Island Light 
Battery, May 2, 1861; served in the defenses of Washington and 
in Virginia; mustered out of service with battery, August 6, 1861. 

Enos Munger. Private, Company C, Seventh Minnesota 
Volunteers, August 14, 1862; discharged at Benton Barracks, 
Missouri, March 20, 1864, for promotion; Chaplain, Sixty-second 
United States Colored Infantry, May 31, 1864; resigned, Decem- 
ber 28, 1864. 

James N. Olney. Lieutenant Colonel, Second California 
Volunteers, September 2, 1861; mustered out of service at San 
Francisco, California, October 20, 1864. 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 17 

Henry C. Parsons. Sergeant, Eleventh Pennsylvania Vol- 
unteers, April 25, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered out of serv- 
ice with regiment, July 25, 1861; Captain, Pennsylvania Volun- 
teers, 1863. 

Nathaniel P. Richmond. Lieutenant Colonel, First West 
Virginia Volunteer Cavalry, October 7, 1861; Colonel, August 6, 
1862; at the battle of Gettysburg, after General Farnsworth was 
killed, July 3, 1863, he commanded the First Cavalry Brigade, 
and was mentioned by Major General Kilpatrick in his report as 
one who deserved "the greatest praise"; resigned, and was mus- 
tered out, November 2, 1863. 

Amos D. Smith, Jr. Second Lieutenant, Tenth Light Bat- 
tery, Rhode Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service with battery, August 30, 1862. 

William Tillman. Major and Paymaster, United States 
Volunteers, September 9, 1861; served in Virginia and in the 
Department of the Cumberland; Brevet Lieutenant Colonel, 
March 13, 1865; mustered out of service, January 15, 1866. 

Thomas Vernon. Corporal, Seventy-first New York Vol- 
unteers, April 19, 1861; mustered out, July 30, 1861; re-entered 
the service, May 28, 1862; mustered out, September 2, 1862; 
entered the service again, June 17, 1863; mustered out, July 22, 
1863; served in Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania. 

Jared J. Williams. Private, Seventeenth New Hampshire 
Volunteers, October 18, 1862; Captain, Company A, December 
30, 1862; mustered out of service, April 16, 1863. 

Joseph R. Winchester. Second Lieutenant, Company F, 
St. James Regiment, Louisiana Militia, September 13, 1861. 
The Confederate records in the War Department at Washington 
show that he was serving, December 1, 1862, as First Lieutenant 
of the Pelican Light Artillery. These records also show that 
November 18, 1863, he was First Lieutenant in Faries Louisiana 
Battery. 



18 CIVIIv WAR RECORD 

CLASS OF 1855 

IvOUis Bell. Captain, Company A, First New Hampshire 
Volunteers, May, 1861; mustered out of service with regiment, 
August, 1861; Lieutenant Colonel, Fourth New Hampshire Vol- 
unteers, September 3, 1861; Colonel, May 16, 1862; commanded 
Third Brigade, Second Division, Tenth Army Corps; served in 
Maryland, Virginia, South Carolina and North Carolina; killed 
at Fort Fisher, North Carolina, January 15, 1865; Brevet Briga- 
dier General, January 15, 1865. 

John W. Bigelow. Sergeant, Company E, Fifty-first 
Massachusetts Volunteers, September 21, 1862; served in North 
Carolina; mustered out of service, July 25, 1863. 

Horace H. Brand. Lieutenant Colonel and Colonel, First 
Regiment of Riflemen and Sixth District Missouri State Guard, 
Confederate service; Inspector General, Missouri Confederate 
forces, July 16, 1861; served on the staff of Major General Ster- 
ling Price. In the General Catalogue of the University (1914) 
it is stated that he was killed in Arkansas, March 13, 1863. 

John K. Brown. Acting Second Lieutenant of Engineers 
(Confederate) at Wilmington, North Carolina, from April 13, 
1863, to September 30, 1864. He resigned February 1, 1865, and 
no later record of his service has been found in the War Depart- 
ment in Washington. 

William P. Grier. Assistant Surgeon, Third Cavalry, 
United States Army, July 30, 1862; on duty at the United States 
Hospital, Chester, Pennsylvania, and at the Medical Inspector's 
office in Philadelphia. While passing up the Arkansas River to 
join his regiment, January 8, 1866, he was killed by the bursting 
of the boiler of steamer Miami. 

MosEs B. Jenkins. Private, Company C, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 2, 1861. 

Arthur J. Magenis. Quartermaster, Second Missouri Mili- 
tia, November, 1861 (recorded in the Official Records of the Union 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 19 

and Confederate Armies), when he was exchanged for Captain 
E. C. Thomas, Thirteenth Missouri Volunteers (Union service); 
First Lieutenant and Adjutant, Twenty-seventh Arkansas Infan- 
try, July 14, 1862; Lieutenant Colonel, October 1, 1862; Adju- 
tant and Inspector General (Confederate), February 15, 1864. It 
is mentioned in the records of the War Department, Washington, 
that he was serving in that position, February 21, 1865, but there 
is no later record of his service. 

Charles Phelps. Second Lieutenant, Thirty-seventh Mas- 
sachusetts Volunteers, August 27, 1862; First Lieutenant, Decem- 
ber 30, 1862. The regiment served in Virginia, Maryland and 
Pennsylvania. It was also ordered to New York, July 31, 1863, 
for duty in connection with the draft riot. Resigned, and was 
mustered out of service, November 17, 1863. 

Addison W. Preston. Captain, Company D, First Ver- 
mont Cavalry, October 15, 1861; Lieutenant Colonel, September 
16, 1862; Colonel, April 29, 1864; killed in action at Hawes' 
Shop, Virginia, June 3, 1864. 

Horatio Rogers, Jr. First Lieutenant, Third Rhode Island 
Heavy Artillery, August 27, 1861; Captain, October 9, 1861; 
Major, August 18, 1862; Colonel, Eleventh Rhode Island Volun- 
teers, December 27, 1862; Colonel, Second Rhode Island Vol- 
unteers, January 29, 1863; served in South Carolina and Virginia; 
resigned and honorably mustered out of service, January 14, 1864; 
Brevet Brigadier General, United States Volunteers, March 13, 
1865. 

Charles A. Snow. Chaplain, Third Massachusetts Volun- 
teers, October 10, 1862; served in North Carolina; mustered out 
of service with regiment, June 26, 1863. 

Henry N. Snyder. Captain, Company K, Fifty-ninth 
Illinois Volunteers, July 30, 1861; Assistant Commissary of Mus- 
ters on staff of General Jefferson C. Davis, First Division, Fourth 
Army Corps, from April to October, 1863, and on the staff of 
Major General Philip H. Sheridan, from October, 1863, to August, 



20 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

1864; served in Tennessee and Virginia; mustered out of service, 
October 5, 1864. 

John F. Tobey. First Lieutenant and Adjutant, Tenth 
Rhode Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mus- 
tered out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

William M. Turner. Assistant Surgeon, Virginia Volun- 
teers, May 17, 1861; Assistant Surgeon, Confederate Army, July 
19, 1861; resigned. May 6, 1862, and entered the Confederate 
Navy as Assistant Surgeon, serving later with the Naval Battalion 
on the James River; surrendered at Richmond, Virginia, April 3, 
1865, and was paroled April 18, 1865. 

Orestes Warren. Private, Company A, First Mississippi 
Cavalry, August 16, 1861. On a roll of the company in the War 
Department at Washington, he is recorded as present from April 
30, 1862, to October 31, 1862, but no later report is known to 
exist. 

Benjamin F. Winchester. Mentioned in the Official Rec- 
ords of the Union and Confederate Armies as First Lieutenant in 
Faries Louisiana Battery, and later as Captain of that battery. 
He is mentioned in command of the battery in reports of Novem- 
ber 19, 1864, December 31, 1864, and June 1, 1865, serving then 
in the Confederate Trans-Mississippi Department. 

CLASS OF 1856 

George W. Adams. Private, First Rhode Island Light 
Battery, May 2, 1861; First Lieutenant, First Rhode Island Light 
Artillery, August 12, 1861; Captain, January 30, 1863; Brevet 
Major, October 19, 1864; served in Maryland and Virginia; mus- 
tered out of service with battery, June 24, 1865. 

Charles H. Alden. Assistant Surgeon, United States 
Army, June 23, 1860; Surgeon, July 28, 1866; Brevet Major, 
March 13, 1865; remained in the service. 

Caleb Bates. Volunteer Aide to his cousin. General Joshua 
H. Bates, in the spring of 1861; in September, 1862, Volunteer 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 21 

Aide to Major General A, McCook, commanding the right wing 
of the Army of the Ohio; March 11, 1863, commissioned Major 
and Aide-de-Camp, United States Volunteers, and assigned to 
duty on the staff of Major General McCook, then commanding 
the Twentieth Army Corps; served in the Army of the Cumber- 
land and in the Department of Missouri; mustered out of service, 
November 22, 1865. 

Nicholas B, Bolles. First Lieutenant, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Horace E. Brooks. Corporal, Company A, Twenty-fifth 
Massachusetts Volunteers, September 16, 1861; served in North 
Carolina and Virginia; discharged on surgeon's certificate of dis- 
ability, January 6, 1863, 

Henderson Crawford. Second Lieutenant, Company G, 
Consolidated Eighteenth Regiment and Yellow Jacket Battalion, 
Louisiana Infantry, on muster roll as present for duty, January 
and February, 1864; also in a list of paroled officers on file in the 
War Department, Washington, District of Columbia, as Captain, 
Company G, Eighteenth Louisiana Infantry, paroled at Natchi- 
toches, Louisiana, June 6, 1865. 

James M. Cutts. Private, Company C, First Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 9, 1861; served in Virginia; discharged to accept 
promotion, June 23, 1861; Captain, Eleventh Infantry, United 
States Army, May 14, 1861; Judge Advocate on staff of Major 
General Burnside; detached from staff, September 28, 1863; Brevet 
Major, United States Army, August 1, 1864; Brevet Lieutenant 
Colonel, August 1, 1864; Captain, Twentieth Infantry, United 
States Army; remained in the service. 

J. Halsey De Wolf. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Thomas EwiNG, Jr. Colonel, Eleventh Kansas Volunteers, 
September 15, 1862; Brigadier General, United States Volun- 



22 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

teers, March 13, 1863; Brevet Major General, United States Vol- 
unteers, March 13, 1865; wounded at Pilot Knob, Missouri; 
served in Missouri, Arkansas and the Indian Territory; resigned, 
March 13, 1865. 

Charles H. Howe. Assistant Surgeon, United States 
Army. 

George W. I^emon. Private, Company H, Third Michigan 
Volunteers, May 13, 1861; mustered out of service at expiration 
of enlistment, June 20, 1864. 

Charles H. I^gthrop. Additional Assistant Surgeon, First 
Iowa Cavalry, May 14, 1862; Assistant Surgeon, February 1, 
1863; Surgeon, July 2, 1864; mustered out with regiment, Feb- 
ruary 15, 1865. 

Frank A. Rhodes. First I,ieutenant, Tenth I^ight Battery, 
Rhode Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mus- 
tered out of service with battery, August 30, 1862. 

Samuel Starkweather. Private, Company D, Eighty- 
fourth Ohio Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mus- 
tered out at expiration of service at Camp Delaware, Ohio, Sep- 
tember 20, 1862. 

John E. Tourtellotte. Captain, Company H, Fourth 
Minnesota Volunteers, October 5, 1861; Lieutenant Colonel, 
August 24, 1862; Colonel, November 24, 1862; wounded at 
Alatoona, Georgia, October, 1864; Brevet Brigadier General; 
served in Mississippi, Tennessee, Georgia, South Carolina, North 
Carolina and Virginia; Captain, United States Army; remained 
in the service. 

Amos P. Wells. Captain, Company C, Eleventh New 
York Volunteers, August 4, 1861; resigned, April 30, 1862; 
Major, Twentieth United States Colored Infantry, January 15, 
1864; served in the Department of the Gulf; mustered out of 
service, October 7, 1865. 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 23 

CLASS OF 1857 

Henry T. Bissell. Sergeant Major, One Hundred and 
Eleventh Ohio Volunteers, September 6, 1862; Second Lieuten- 
ant, Company H; First Lieutenant and Adjutant, April 29, 1863; 
mustering officer on the staff of Brigadier General Judah, June, 
1863; died in General Hospital, Number 2, Louisville, Kentucky, 
September 10, 1863. 

Alexander T. Britton. Private, Captain Smead's Com- 
pany, District of Columbia Volunteers, later known as Company 
A, Third Battalion, District of Columbia Militia (National Rifles), 
April 21, 1861; honorably discharged, June 8, 1861. 

Caleb H. Carlton. On leaving college he entered the 
Military Academy at West Point. At the opening of the Civil 
War he was a First Lieutenant in the Fourth United States Infan- 
try; Captain, June 30, 1862; Brevet Major, July 4, 1862; Brevet 
Lieutenant Colonel, September 20, 1863; Colonel, Eighty-Ninth 
Ohio Volunteers, July 7, 1863; mustered out of the volunteer 
service with his regiment, June 23, 1865; remained in the service 
of the United States until retired, June 30, 1897. 

George W. Carr. Assistant Surgeon, First Rhode Island 
Volunteers, April 18, 1861; Assistant Surgeon, Second Rhode 
Island Volunteers, August 27, 1861; Surgeon, September 12, 
1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of service, June 17, 1864» 
term of service having expired. 

Charles L. Comfort. First Sergeant, Company I, Elev- 
enth Louisiana Infantry, August 18, 1861. Prison records in the 
War Department at Washington, District of Columbia, mention 
him as First Lieutenant, same regiment, captured at Liberty,. 
Mississippi, November 16, 1864. November 22, 1864, he was a 
prisoner at Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Afterward he was sent to 
Ship Island, Mississippi, where he was exchanged March 2, 1865. 

Samuel J. Fletcher. Sergeant, Company H, Fifteenth 
Massachusetts Volunteers, May 25, 1861; First Sergeant, January 
16, 1862; Second Lieutenant, May 18, 1862; First Lieutenant, 



24 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

November 14, 1862; Captain, Company D, July 4, 1863; mus- 
tered out of service, July 28, 1864. 

Robert H. Ives. I^ieutenant and Volunteer Aide-de-Camp 
to Brigadier General I. P. Rodman, commanding Third Division, 
Ninth Army Corps, August 19, 1862; served in Virginia and 
Maryland; mortally wounded at the battle of Antietam, Septem- 
ber 17, 1862; died at Hagerstown, Maryland, September 27, 1862. 

Charles H. Pope. Sergeant Major, First Light Battery, 
Rhode Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; Served in Virginia; mus- 
tered out of service with battery, August 6, 1861; First lyieuten- 
ant, First Rhode Island Light Artillery, October 17, 1861; served 
in Virginia and North Carolina; resigned, October 6, 1862; Cap- 
tain and Commissary of Subsistence, United States Volunteers, 
February 21, 1863. 

William B, Rogers. Acting Master's Mate, United States 
Navy, October 11, 1862; ordered to United States steamer Rhode 
Island; Acting Ensign, July 13, 1863; detached from United 
States steamer Rhode Island, September 19, 1863, and ordered to 
United States steamer Onward; detached on two months' leave, 
June 16, 1865; honorably discharged, September 16, 1865. 

JosiAH P. Stone. First Lieutenant, One Hundred and Sev- 
enteenth New York Volunteers, April 9, 1862; Captain, August 
20, 1862; served in Virginia; killed in action near Petersburg, 
Virginia, June 17, 1864. 

JosiAH G. Woodbury. Acting Assistant Paymaster, United 
States Navy, December, 1862; served in the South Atlantic Block- 
ading Squadron; killed on board the ironclad Catskill in the 
attack on Forts Wagner and Sumter in Charleston Harbor, South 
Carolina, August 17, 1863. 

CLASS OF 1858 

Samuel W. Abbott. Assistant Surgeon, United States 
Navy, November 11, 1861; served in North and South Blockad- 
ing Squadrons; resigned. May 27, 1864; Surgeon, First Massa- 



OP BROWN UNIVERSITY. 25 

chusetts Cavalry, November 2, 1864; served in Virginia; mus- 
tered out of service with regiment, June 26, 1865. 

Edward I,. ^ Clark. Chaplain, Twelfth Massachusetts Vol- 
unteers, June 26, 1861; served in Virginia; resigned, June 16, 
1862. 

Stephen A. Cobb. Captain, Fourth Kansas Volunteers, 
1862; Provost Marshal of the Eighth and Ninth Districts of the 
Department of Missouri; mustered out of the service in 1863; 
appointed Captain and Commissary of Subsistence in the spring 
of 1864, and assigned to duty on the staff of Major General Gor- 
don Granger; Chief Commissary, Thirteenth Army Corps; Brevet 
Major; Brevet Lieutenant Colonel; served in the Department of 
Missouri and the Department of the Gulf; mustered out of service, 
September 23, 1865. 

Walter Congdon. Private, Company F, Seventh New 
York Infantry; enrolled in New York City, April 17, 1861; mus- 
tered into the service of the United States at Washington, Dis- 
trict of Columbia, April 26, 1861; mustered out in New York, 
June 3, 1861; also enrolled at New York in same company and 
regiment. May 25, 1862; mustered into the service of the United 
States at Baltimore, Maryland, June 19, 1862; mustered out at 
New York, September 5, 1862. 

Elisha Dyer, Jr. Sergeant, First Light Battery, Rhode 
Island Volunteers, April 18, 1861; discharged, April 27, 1861, on 
Surgeon's certificate of injuries received at Easton, Pennsylvania, 
previous to muster in of battery. 

Robert H. I. Goddard. Private, Company C, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861 (date of muster); mustered out 
of service with regiment, August 2, 1861; Lieutenant and Volun- 
teer Aide-de-Camp on staff of Major General Burnside, Septem- 
ber 20, 1862; Captain, March 11, 1863; Brevet Major, August 4, 
1864; Brevet Lieutenant Colonel, April 2, 1865; Assistant Inspector 
General, Ninth Army Corps; served in Maryland, Virginia, Ken- 



26 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

tucky and Tennessee; mustered out of service at the close of the 
war. 

Arnold Green. Private, Company C, First Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 29, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, August 2, 1861. 

Edward M. Gushee. Chaplain, Ninth New Hampshire 
Volunteers, July 10, 1862; served in Maryland, Virginia and 
Kentucky; resigned, October 20, 1863. 

John Hay. Secretary to President Lincoln, March, 1861; 
Volunteer Aide-de-Camp to Major General Hunter, 1863; Major 
and Assistant Adjutant General, January 12, 1864; ordered to 
Major General Gilmore, commanding Department of the South, 
April, 1864; ordered to Washington as Aide-de-Camp to the Pres- 
ident, May 31, 1864; Brevet L,ieutenant Colonel; Brevet Colonel. 

John G. Haskell. First Lieutenant and Regimental Quar- 
termaster, Tenth Kansas Volunteers, July 24, 1861; Captain and 
Assistant Quartermaster, June 11, 1862; Brevet Major, United 
States Volunteers, March 13, 1865; mustered out of service, 
November 22, 1865. 

Robert J. Henderson. Colonel, Forty-second Georgia 
Infantry, March 20, 1862; in March and April, 1865, he was in 
command of Cummings Brigade of Confederate troops in North 
Carolina. The War Department in Washington has no further 
record of his service. 

Charles L. Kneass. First Lieutenant Eighteenth United 
States Infantry, May 14, 1861; Adjutant, July 2, 1861; Captain, 
1862; served in Tennessee; killed at the battle of Murfreesboro, 
December 31, 1862. 

Moses Lyman. Second Lieutenant, Company F, Fifteenth 
Vermont Volunteers, September 16, 1862; First Lieutenant, Com- 
pany H, November 8, 1862; transferred to Company K, June 19, 
1863; mustered out of service with regiment, August 5, 1863. 

Francis Mansfield. Chaplain, One Hundred and Thirty- 
second New York Volunteers, August 15, 1862; served in Vir- 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 27 

ginia, in the First Brigade, Fifth Division, Eighteenth Army- 
Corps; mustered out of service, February 6, 1863. 

Robert Mili^ar. Assistant Surgeon, Fourth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, August 27, 1861; Brevet Major, United States Volun- 
teers, March 13, 1865; served in Virginia; mustered out of serv- 
ice at expiration of service, August 26, 1864. 

William A. Mowry. Captain, Company K, Eleventh 
Rhode Island Volunteers, October 1, 1862; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service with regiment, July 13, 1863. 

Aaron H. Nelson. Acting Assistant Paymaster, United 
States Navy, July 7, 1863; served in the North and South Block- 
ading Squadrons; resigned, March 28, 1865. 

Walter B. Noyes. Chaplain, Fifth Rhode Island Volun- 
teers, November 7, 1861; served in North Carolina; resigned, 
August 15, 1862. 

Samuel Thurber. Private, Company K, Eleventh Rhode 
Island Volunteers, October 1, 1862; Second Lieutenant, Novem- 
ber 3, 1862; First Lieutenant, March 26, 1863; served in Vir- 
ginia; mustered out of service with regiment, July 13, 1863. 

CLASS OF 1859 

Theodore Andrews. Private, Company D, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 2, 1861. 

Joseph A. Ansley. Third Sergeant, Company A, Twelfth 
Georgia Infantry, June 15, 1861; First Sergeant, 1863; captured 
at Fisher's Hill, Virginia, September 22, 1864; released at Point 
Lookout, Maryland, June 22, 1865. 

Lucius S. BollES. Assistant Surgeon, Second Rhode Island 
Volunteers, March 9, 1863; served in Maryland and Virginia; 
resigned, September 10, 1863. 

William E. Bowen. First Sergeant, Battery E, First 
Rhode Island Light Artillery, September 30, 1861; served in 
Virginia; discharged on surgeon's certificate, March 14, 1862. 



28 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

Edward Bredell. First Lieutenant and Aide-de-Camp on 
the staff of General J. S. Bowen, April 23, 1863. July 4, 1863, 
he was made a prisoner at Vicksburg, Mississippi, and paroled. 
Later he enlisted as a private in Company D (Mosby's Cavalry 
command). Captain R. P. Montjoy's Company, organized in 1864. 
He was killed in action, but the date of his death is not given in 
Confederate military records. 

William Eddy. Contract Surgeon, United States Army, 
April 29, 1862, until February 10, 1863; also from May 17, 1864, 
until August 25, 1864. 

Benjamin T. Hutchins. Private, Company A, Third Bat- 
talion, District of Columbia Militia (National Rifles), April 15, 
1861; mustered out, June 20, 1861; First Lieutenant, Third 
United States Cavalry, May 14, 1861; Regimental Quartermaster, 
July 1, 1861; transferred to the Sixth United States Cavalry, 
August 3, 1861; Captain, November 19, 1863; Lieutenant Colonel, 
First New Hampshire Cavalry, March 18, 1864; Brevet Major. 
United States Army, March 13, 1865; honorably discharged from 
the volunteer service, July 15, 1865; remained in the regular 
army. 

Adoniram B. Judson. Assistant Surgeon, United States 
Navy, July 30, 1861; Passed Assistant Surgeon, June 22, 1864; 
Surgeon, December 26, 1866; served in the South Atlantic and 
Gulf Squadrons; remained in the service. 

William W. Keen. Assistant Surgeon, Fifth Massachu- 
setts Volunteers, July 1, 1861; participated in the first battle of 
Bull Run; mustered out of service with regiment, July 31, 1861; 
Acting Assistant Surgeon, United States Army, May 8, 1862; 
temporarily in charge also of Camp Sprague; Assistant Surgeon 
and Executive Qfiicer, Eckington Hospital, Washington, District 
of Columbia; Surgeon in charge of Ascension General Hospital, 
Washington, District of Columbia, also of the Eighth Street Gen- 
eral Hospital in addition; on field duty, second Bull Run battle, 
August 30, 1862, and until September 5th a prisoner; afterwards 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 29 

on hospital duty at Philadelphia, viz., at the Satterlee General 
Hospital, West Philadelphia, then at the Christian Street Hos- 
pital, Philadelphia, with Assistant Surgeons S. Weir Mitchell and 
George R. Morehouse, in charge of patients suffering from inju- 
ries and diseases of the nervous system; later this ward and all 
the three Assistant Surgeons were transferred to Turner's Lane 
Hospital, Philadelphia; mustered out of service, July 2, 1864. 

Edwin W. Mitchell. Assistant Quartermaster, United 
States Army, September 6, 1862; resigned and mustered out of 
service, December 5. 1862. 

Egbert Olcott. Major, One Hundred and Twenty-first 
New York Volunteers, August 23, 1862; Lieutenant Colonel, 
April 10, 1863; Brevet Colonel, October 19, 1864, for distin- 
guished gallantry in the battle of Cedar Creek; Colonel, April 18, 
1865; mustered out of the service of the United States, June 25, , 
1865. 

Joseph Perkins. Enrolled, December 18, 1861; Captain, 
Company L, First Connecticut Volunteer Artillery, March 12, 
1862; served in Virginia; resigned, December 3, 1863. 

Charles H. Perry. Assistant Surgeon, United States 
Navy, September 2, 1861; served in the West Gulf and North 
Atlantic Blockading Squadron; resigned. May 9, 1865. 

Henry Phelps. Private, Company B, Ninety-first New 
York Volunteers, March 13, 1865. Colonel Jonathan Tarbell, 
commanding the regiment, in an official report dated "in the 
field near Appomattox Court House, Va., April 12, 1865," 
referring to his officers and men who had "manifested the most 
determined perseverance and courage" in the campaign just 
closed, says, "Private Henry Phelps, Company B, captured the 
Adjutant of the Thirty-fourth Alabama, turned him over to the 
provost marshal. Fifth Army Corps, and holds receipt." Official 
Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Serial Number 95, 
page 889. 



30 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

Samuel T. Pointer. Chaplain, Fifteenth Kentucky Vol- 
unteers, June 3, 1863; served in Tennessee and Georgia; mus- 
tered out of service, February, 1865. 

George L,. Porter. Assistant Surgeon, United States 
Army, July 17, 1862; served with Best's Battery, United States 
Artillery, and with Fifth United States Cavalry; captured during 
Banks' campaign in the Shenandoah Valley; wounded at Boons- 
boro', Maryland, July 9, 1863; assigned to duty as Post Surgeon, 
at Washington Arsenal, District of Columbia, May 12, 1864; 
Brevet Captain, Brevet Major, United States Army, March 13, 
1865; remained in the service. 

Nathan A. Reed, Jr. First Sergeant, Company A, Fif- 
tieth Ohio Volunteers, July 10, 1862; Second I^ieutenant, October 
16, 1862; First Lieutenant, May 27, 1863; mentioned in the 
Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies as on the 
staff of Brigadier General Jacob Ammen in East Tennessee in 
1864, and as Acting Assistant Adjutant General at Knoxville, 
Tennessee, in 1865; he resigned and was mustered out of the 
service, April 20, 1865. 

Charles M. Smith. Private, Company C, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 2, 1861; Second Lieutenant, 
Eleventh United States Heavy Artillery (colored), January 14, 
1864; served in the Department of the Gulf; mustered out of 
service, October 2, 1865. 

Robert H. Thurston. Third Assistant Engineer, United 
States Navy, July 29, 1861; Second Assistant Engineer (Ensign), 
December 18, 1862; First Assistant Engineer (Master), January 
30, 1865; served in the North and South Atlantic Blockading 
Squadrons, and in the Gulf Blockading Squadron; remained in 
the service, and on duty at the Naval Academy, Annapolis, 
Maryland. 

Thomas F. Tobey. Sergeant, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 29, 1862; Captain, Seventh Rhode Island 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 31 

Volunteers, September 4, 1862; Major, January 7, 1863; served 
in Virginia, Kentucky and Mississippi; resigned, February 9, 
1864; Second Lieutenant, Fourteenth Infantry, United States 
Army, May 3, 1865; First Lieutenant, May 6, 1865; remained in 
the service. 

Levi a. Tower. Ensign, Company E, First Rhode Island 
Volunteers; mustered into the service of the United States, May 
21, 1861; resigned, July 1, 1861; Captain, Company F, Second 
Rhode Island Volunteers, June 6, 1861; killed at the battle of 
Bull Run, July 21, 1861. 

Richard Waterman. Private, First Light Battery, Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with battery, August 6, 1861; First Lieutenant, 
First Rhode Island Light Artillery, Battery C, August 8, 1861; 
Captain, July 25, 1862; served in Virginia and Maryland; mus- 
tered out of service, September 2, 1864. 

CLASS OF 1860 

Henry S. Adams. First Lieutenant and Adjutant, Forty- 
first Massachusetts Volunteers, September, 1862; served in the 
Department of the Gulf; mustered out of service, November 10, 
1863. 

Crawford Allen. Second Lieutenant, First Rhode Island 
Light Artillery, November 7, 1861; First Lieutenant, November 
18, 1862; Adjutant, First Regiment Rhode Island Artillery; Cap- 
tain, Battery H, First Rhode Island Light Artillery, September 
30,1863; Brevet Major, April 2, 1865; Brevet Lieutenant Colonel; 
served in Virginia; wounded at the battle of Fredericksburg, Vir- 
ginia, May 3, 1863; mustered out of service, June 28, 1865. 

Ethan Allen. Colonel, Third Merchants Volunteers, New 
York, October 23, 1862; mustered out of the service, April 21, 
1863, by consolidation of the regiment with the Blair Rifles, 
afterwards consolidated with the One Hundred and Seventy- 
eighth New York Volunteers. 



32 civil. WAR RECORD 

George N. Bliss. Private, Company B, First Rhode Island 
Cavalry, September 28, 1861; Quartermaster Sergeant, October 
4, 1861; First I,ieutenant and Regimental Quartermaster, October 
12, 1861; assigned to duty in Company G, December 21, 1861; 
Captain, July 15, 1862; Judge Advocate, General Court Martial, 
New Haven, Connecticut, from August, 1863, to May, 1864; 
Assistant Provost Marshal, General Sheridan's Cavalry; wounded 
at Waynesborough, Virginia, September 28, 1864, and taken 
prisoner; in hospital at Charlottesville, Virginia, and at the L,ibby 
Prison, Richmond, Virginia, December 9; selected as a hostage 
and placed in close confinement; exchanged, February 8, 1865; 
mustered out of service. May 15, 1865. 

Horace S. Bradford. Acting Assistant Paymaster, United 
States Navy, February 24, 1862; served in the West Gulf and 
Atlantic Blockading Squadrons; resigned, December 1, 1863. 

David P. Corbin. First Lieutenant, Company G, Twenty- 
second Connecticut Volunteers, August 25, 1862; Captain, Feb- 
ruary 19, 1863; served in Virginia; mustered out of service with 
regiment, July 7, 1863. 

Samuel W. Duncan. Captain, Company F, Fiftieth Mas- 
sachusetts Volunteers, November 10, 1862; served in the Depart- 
ment of the Gulf; mustered out of service with regiment, August 
24, 1863. 

Harris Howard. Chaplain, Seventh Rhode Island Volun- 
teers, September 6, 1862; served in Maryland, Virginia and Ken- 
tucky; resigned, June 3, 1863. 

Pardon S. Jastram. Private, Company C, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 2, 1861; Second Lieutenant, 
First Rhode Island Light Artillery, October 16, 1861; First Lieu- 
tenant, December 6, 1862; Assistant Adjutant General, Artillery 
Brigade, Third Army Corps; served in Maryland and Virginia; 
resigned, March 29, 1864. 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 33 

W11.LIAM L. Jones. Enlisted at Norristown, Pennsylvania, 
September 10, 1861; Quartermaster Sergeant, Fifty-first Pennsyl- 
vania Volunteers, October 16, 1861; served in North Carolina, 
Virginia and Maryland; died at Falmouth, Virginia, December 
11, 1862. 

Charles G. King. Hospital Steward, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Joseph I,. Meigs. Private, Company B, Thirty-fourth 
Pennsylvania Volunteers, June 29, 1863, to repel the invasion of 
Pennsylvania, which ended with the battle of Gettysburg, July 
1-3, 1863; mustered out of service with regiment, August 10, 
1863. 

Frederick A. Mitchel. Captain and Aide-de-Camp on 
staff of Major General O. M. Mitchel, September 3, 1862; mus- 
tered out of service, November 7, 1862; Second Lieutenant, Six- 
teenth United States Infantry, March 25, 1863; served in the 
Department of the Cumberland; resigned, August 7, 1863. 

Horace G. Miller. Sergeant, Company H, Ninth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; Commissary Sergeant, June 9, 
1862; served in the defenses of Washington; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 2, 1862. 

Benjamin F. Pabodie. Corporal, Company H, Tenth 
Rhode Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mus- 
tered out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Andrew C. Pollard. Paymaster's Clerk, United States 
Navy, April 17, 1865; served in the West Gulf Blockading Squad- 
ron; discharged, December 20, 1865. 

Henry K. Porter. Private, Company A, Forty-fifth Mas- 
sachusetts Volunteers, October, 1862; served in North Carolina; 
mustered out of service with regiment, July 8, 1863. 

lyiviNGSTON Saterlee. On staff of Colonel (afterwards 
Major General) Butterfield, April 19, 1861; Captain, Company 

3 



34 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

K, Twelfth New York Volunteers (National Guards); Lieuten- 
ant Colonel, 1862; taken prisoner at Harper's Ferry, Virginia, 
September, 1862; Brevet Brigadier General, United States Vol- 
unteers. 

William S. Smith. Private, Company C, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 2, 1861; Captain, Tenth 
Rhode Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Henry J. Spooner. Second Lieutenant, Fourth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, August 27, 1862; First Lieutenant and Adju- 
tant, October 5, 1862; Assistant Commissary of Subsistence, 
Third Brigade, Heckman's Division, Eighteenth Army Corps, 
February, 1864; also, April 30, 1864, with Second Brigade, First 
Division, same Corps, until November, 1864, when made Acting 
Adjutant, Seventh Rhode Island Volunteers; mustered out as 
First Lieutenant and Adjutant of that regiment, February 3, 
1865; served in Maryland, Virginia and North Carolina. 

JoiiN E. Tefft. Principal Musician, Major Zagony's Bat- 
talion, Fremont's Body Guard, Missouri Volunteer Cavalry, Aug- 
ust 12, 1861; Hospital Steward and Field Medical Purveyor, 
October 20. 1861; mustered out, November 20, 1861; Assistant 
Surgeon, First Arkansas Cavalry, March 1, 1863; resigned and 
mustered out, January 11, 1865. 

Albert G. Washburn. Private, One Hundred and Thirty- 
fourth New York Volunteers, July, 1862; Sergeant; First Lieu- 
tenant, Company I, September 12, 1862; Captain, Company E, 
October 24, 1862; served in Virginia; died at Falmouth, Virginia, 
January 26, 1863. 

John Whipple. First Lieutenant and Adjutant, First 
Rhode Island Cavalry, October 4, 1861; Captain, February 21, 
1862; Major, June 27, 1862; served in Maryland and Virginia; 
resigned, February 17, 1863. 

Alfred M. Williams. Private, Company K, Fourth Mas- 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 35 

sachusetts Volunteers, August 12, 1862; served in the Depart- 
ment of the Gulf; mustered out of service with regiment, August 
28, 1863. 

ClyASS OF 1861 

Orville a. Barker. Private, Thirty-ninth Massachusetts 
Volunteers, August 5, 1862; Corporal, January 1, 1863; Hospital 
Steward, October 13, 1863; Second Lieutenant, November 8, 
1863; First Lieutenant, September 13, 1864; Adjutant, December 
5, 1864; Captain, April 3, 1865; served in Maryland and Vir- 
ginia; mustered out with regiment, June 2, 1865. 

John H. Brown. Private, Company F, Fourth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, September 16, 1861; re-enlisted as a Veteran 
Volunteer, January 5, 1864; transferred to Company D, Seventh 
Rhode Island Volunteers, October 21, 1864; transferred to Com- 
pany D, Battalion Seventh Rhode Island Volunteers, June 6, 
1865; Corporal, June 10, 1865; served in North Carolina and 
Virginia; mustered out of service, July 13, 1865. 

John K. Bucki,yn. Private, First Rhode Island Light 
Artillery, 1861; Quartermaster Sergeant, September, 1861; Sec- 
ond Lieutenant, March 1, 1862; First Lieutenant, December 31, 
1862; wounded at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, July 2, 1863; Bre- 
vet Captain, United States Volunteers, October 19, 1864; Captain, 
1865; mustered out of service, February 2, 1865. 

Henry S. Burrage. Private, Company A, Thirty-sixth 
Massachusetts Volunteers, August 1, 1862; Sergeant, August 5, 
1862; Sergeant Major, August 27, 1862; Second Lieutenant, 
Company D, May 16, 1863; First Lieutenant, November 17, 1863; 
wounded at Cold Harbor, Virginia, June 3, 1864; Captain, June 
19, 1864; a prisoner at Richmond and Danville, Virginia, from 
November 1, 1864, to February 22, 1865; Brevet Major, United 
States Volunteers, March 13, 1865; Acting Assistant General, 
First Brigade, Second Division, Ninth Army Corps; served in 
Maryland, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee and Virginia; mus- 
tered out of service, June 8, 1865. 



36 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

Christopher C. Burrows. Quartermaster Sergeant, Com- 
pany C, First Rhode Island Cavalry, December 11, 1861; served 
in Maryland and Virginia; discharged, April 20, 1864, to accept 
the Chaplaincy of the Twenty-second United States Infantry 
(colored); served in the Department of the Gulf; resigned, June 
17, 1865. 

Frank H. Carpenter. Hospital Steward, Twelfth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, October 13, 1862; served in Virginia and 
Kentucky; mustered out of service with regiment, July 29, 1863. 

Thomas T. Caswell. Assistant Paymaster, United States 
Navy (Master), September 9, 1861; Paymaster (Lieutenant Com- 
mander), September 17, 1863; served in the West Gulf, North 
and South Blockading Squadrons; remained in the service. 

Charles H. Chapman. First Lieutenant and Adjutant, 
Fifth Rhode Island Volunteers, November 30, 1861; served in 
North Carolina; resigned. May 14, 1862; Sergeant Major, Thirty- 
ninth Massachusetts Volunteers, September 1, 1862; Second Lieu- 
tenant, August 30, 1863; First Lieutenant, September 6, 1864; a 
prisoner at Richmond and Danville, Virginia, from August 19, 
1864, to February 22, 1865; served in Maryland and Virginia; 
resigned, April 29, 1865; Captain, Forty-first United States 
Infantry (colored), April 30, 1865; served in the Department of 
the Gulf; mustered out of service, December 10, 1865. 

Augustus P. Clarke. Assistant Surgeon, Sixth New York 
Cavalry, August, 1861, to May 5, 1863; Surgeon, May 5, 1863, 
to October, 1865; Surgeon-in-Chief, Second Brigade, First Cav- 
alry Division, February 1, 1865, to July 1, 1865; Brevet Lieuten- 
ant Colonel, United States Volunteers, October 1, 1865. 

Clingman Craig. First Sergeant, Company C, Eleventh 
North Carolina Infantry (Confederate), January 22, 1862; Sec- 
ond Lieutenant, same company and regiment; wounded at Get- 
tysburg, Pennsylvania, July, 1863, and died as the result of his 
wounds, September, 1863. 

George C. Crutcher. Private, Company A, Thirty-first 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 37 

Mississippi Infantry, May 31, 1861; served in Virginia; died of 
typhoid fever at Camp Pickens, Manassas, Virginia, September 2, 
1861. 

James A. DeWolf. Private, Company C, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, April 17, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 2, 1861; Acting Medical 
Cadet at McDougall General Hospital, New York Harbor, March 
10, 1863; Acting Assistant Surgeon, United States Army, at 
Hampton General Hospital, Fortress Monroe, Virginia, June 1, 
1863. 

Wii,LiAM W. Douglas. Second L,ieutenant, Fifth Rhode 
Island Heavy Artillery, November 30, 1861; First Lieutenant, 
June 7, 1862; Captain, February 14, 1863; served in North 
Carolina; mustered out, December 20, 1864, at expiration of 
service. 

T. Henry Edsall,. First Lieutenant and Adjutant, One 
Hundred and Seventy-sixth New York Volunteers (Ironsides), 
December 31, 1862; served in the Department of the Gulf; mus- 
tered out of service with regiment, November 16, 1863. 

Charles H. Hidden. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

William W. Hoppin. Private, Company D, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, April 17, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 2, 1861. 

Charles E. Hosmer. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862; Assistant Sur- 
geon, United States Navy; mustered out at the close of the war. 

Leland D. Jenckes. Private, Company D, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, April 17, 1861; wounded, July 21, 1861 (bat- 
tle of Bull Run) and fell into the hands of the enemy; a pris- 
oner at Richmond, Virginia, and Tuscaloosa, Alabama; paroled, 
March 1, 1862, but remained a prisoner at Salisbury, North Caro- 



3S Civil, WAk RSCORD 

lina, until May 23, 1862; he was then exchanged, and June 1, 
1862, he was mustered out of the service. 

Charles F. Mason. Second Lieutenant, First Rhode 
Island Light Artillery, December 24, 1861; First Lieutenant, 
October 1, 1862; on staff of Colonel Tompkins, Chief of Artillery 
Brigade, Sixth Army Corps, November, 1863; served in Maryland 
and Virginia; resigned, April 21, 1864. 

Charles Mendenhall. Private, Company D, Second Ohio 
Volunteers, April 17, 1861; Sergeant, April 29, 1861; mustered 
out with regiment, June 16, 1861. 

Elisha C. Mowry. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out with regiment, September 1, 1862, 

Stephen F. Peckham. Hospital Steward, Seventh Rhode 
Island Volunteers, September 6, 1862; with Medical Director, 
Ninth Army Corps, May 21, 1864; in charge of Chemical Depart- 
ment, United States Laboratory, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 
January, 1865; served in Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky and 
Mississippi; mustered out of service. May 26, 1865. 

Duncan C. Phillips. First Lieutenant, Company M, 
Fourth Pennsylvania Cavalry, September 9, 1862; Captain, Com- 
pany F, November 21, 1863; Major, January 1, 1865; Inspector 
of Cavalry at Elmira, New York, from July, 1864; mustered out of 
service, February 16, 1865. 

John W. Rogers. First Lieutenant, Seventh Massachu- 
setts Volunteers, June 15, 1861; Captain, Thirty-eighth Massa- 
chusetts Volunteers, August 12, 1862; Captain, Fortieth Mas- 
sachusetts Volunteers, August 18, 1862; declined commission; 
served in Virginia. 

Frederic M. Sackett. Private, Company D, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, April 17, 1861; mustered out of service with 
regiment, August 2, 1861; First Lieutenant, Battery C, First 
Rhode Island Light Artillery, October 5, 1861; wounded at the 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 39 

battle of Chancellorsville, Virginia, May 3, 1863; served in Mary- 
land and Virginia; mustered out of service, October 3, 1863. 

Sumner U. Shearman. Second Lieutenant, Fourth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, August 27, 1862; First Lieutenant, November 
25, 1862; Captain, March 7, 1863; captured before Petersburg, 
Virginia, July 30, 1864; a prisoner at Columbia, South Carolina, 
until exchanged, December 7, 1864; served in Virginia and Mary- 
land; mustered out of service, December 17, 1864. 

Henry K. Southwick. Second Lieutenant, Second Rhode 
Island Volunteers, August 29, 1862; First Lieutenant, August 9, 
1863; Captain, Eleventh United States Heavy Artillery (colored), 
February 1, 1864; Acting Inspector General on the staff of Gen- 
eral T. W. Sherman; served in Virginia and in the Department 
of the Gulf; mustered out of service with regiment, October 2, 
1865. 

John H. Stiness. Second Lieutenant, Second New York 
Artillery, December 13, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered out 
of service, November 1, 1862. 

LuciEN B. Stone. Second Lieutenant, Company E, First 
Rhode Island Volunteers, April 18, 1861; served in Virginia; 
resigned, June 5, 1861. 

Washington B. Trull. Assistant Surgeon, United States 
Volunteers, July 6, 1863; Brevet Captain, November 30, 1865; 
served in Tennessee; mustered out of service, December 8, 1865. 

James C. Williams. Second Lieutenant, Forty-fifth Ohio 
Volunteers, September, 1861; Acting Aide-de-Camp on the staif 
of Major General O. M. Mitchel, September 29, 1861; Second 
Lieutenant, Twenty-fourth Ohio Volunteers, December 20, 1861; 
appointed Aide-de-Camp (rank Second Lieutenant) July 1, 1862, 
to date from April 11, 1862; Captain and Aide-de-Camp, Septem- 
ber 15, 1862, to date from September 3, 1862; died at Beaufort,, 
South Carolina, October 29, 1862. 



40 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

CLASS OF 1862 

Joshua M. Addeman. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; mustered out of service with 
regiment, September 1, 1862; Captain, Company H, Eleventh 
United States Heavy Artillery, November 23, 1863; Acting Assist- 
ant Adjutant General on the staflF of General Cameron, command- 
ing District of La Fourche, Louisiana, 1864; served in Virginia 
and Louisiana; mustered out of service with regiment, October 2, 
1865. 

George H. Babbitt. Private, Company F, Thirty-ninth 
Massachusetts Volunteers, August 5, 1862; Sergeant, September 
1, 1862; served in Ambulance Corps, Fifth Army Corps; mus- 
tered out of service with regiment, June 2, 1865. 

John T. Blake. Sergeant, Battery B, First Rhode Island 
Light Artillery, August 13, 1861; wounded at the battle of Get- 
tysburg, Pennsylvania, July 2, 1863; Second Lieutenant, Battery 
A, October 28, 1863; served in Virginia; mustered out of service, 
August 12, 1864. 

T. Frederic Brown. Corporal, Battery A, First Rhode 
Island Light Artillery, June 6, 1861; Second Lieutenant, Battery 
C, August 13, 1862; First Lieutenant, Battery B, December 29, 
1862; Captain, April 7, 1864; Brevet Major, December 3, 1864; 
Brevet Lieutenant Colonel, April 9, 1865; Inspector General, 
Artillery Brigade, Second Army Corps; wounded at Gettysburg, 
Pennsylvania; served in Maryland and Virginia; mustered out of 
service, June 12, 1865. 

William I. Brown. Second Lieutenant, Ninth New Hamp- 
shire Volunteers, August 10, 1862; First Lieutenant, March 1, 
1863; First Lieutenant and Adjutant, November 1, 1863; Major, 
Eighteenth New Hampshire Volunteers, October 13, 1864; served 
in Maryland, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee and Virginia; 
killed before Petersburg, Virginia, March 29, 1865. 

Frank W. Draper. Private, Thirty-fifth Massachusetts 
Volunteers, August 10, 1862; Captain, Thirty-ninth United States 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 41 

Infantry (colored), April 14, 1864; Acting Aide-de-Camp, July 12, 
1864; Acting Assistant Adjutant General, First Brigade, Third 
Division, Twenty-fifth Army Corps, October 20, 1864; served in 
Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee and North 
Carolina; mustered out of service, July 23, 1865. 

JosiAH R. GoDDARD. Sergeant, Company K, Eleventh 
Rhode Island Volunteers, October 1, 1862; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service with regiment, July 6, 1863. 

James B. M. Grosvenor. Private, First Light Battery, 
Rhode Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861 (date of muster); served 
in Virginia; mustered out of service with regiment, August 6, 
1861. 

RODOI.PHUS H. Johnson. Private, Company I, Ninth 
Rhode Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service with regiment, September 2, 1862. 

Jason B. Kelly. Corporal, Tenth Rhode Island Volun- 
teers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of service 
with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

George E. Mason. Assistant Surgeon, First Massachu- 
setts Heavy Artillery, April 7, 1865; served in Virginia; mus- 
tered out of service, August 23, 1865; Assistant Surgeon, Third 
Massachusetts Heavy Artillery, August 24, 1865; mustered out, 
September 18, 1865. 

Joshua Mellen. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Russell A. Olin. Private, Company I^, Fifteenth Pennsyl- 
vania Cavalry, October 10, 1862; Corporal; served in the Depart- 
ment of the Cumberland, and was in the battle of Murfreesboro, 
Tennessee, December 31, 1862; discharged, February 9, 1863, on 
surgeon's certificate of disability. 

Addison Parker. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 



42 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

James H. Remington. Captain, Second Rhode Island Vol- 
unteers, September 4, 1862; wounded at Fredericksburg, Vir- 
ginia, December 13, 1862; served in Maryland and Virginia; 
May 2, 1863, honorably discharged on account of wounds received 
in action; Captain, Veteran Reserve Corps; Brevet Major. 

Christopher Rhodes. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Isaac H. Saunders. Private, Company D, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 30, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 2, 1861. 

Edward H. Sears. First Lieutenant, Second Rhode Island 
Volunteers, June 6, 1861; Captain, July 22, 1861; resigned, 
October 18, 1861; First Lieutenant, First Rhode Island Light 
Artillery, October 19, 1861; served in Virginia and Maryland; 
resigned, November 14, 1862; Acting Assistant Paymaster, United 
States Navy, August 27, 1863; served in the North and South 
Atlantic Blockading Squadrons; remained in the service. 

Edward N. Whittier. Private, Company C, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; mustered out of service with 
regiment, August 2, 1861; First Sergeant, Fifth Maine Battery, 
November 29, 1861; Second Lieutenant, September 1, 1862; 
First Lieutenant, May 5, 1863; Brevet Captain, United States 
Volunteers, October 19, 1864; Acting Assistant Adjutant Gen- 
eral, Artillery Brigade, Sixth Army Corps, June, 1864; served in 
Maryland and Virginia; mustered out of service with battery, 
July 25, 1865. 

George T. Woodward. Private, Company F, Thirty-ninth 
Massachusetts Volunteers, August 25, 1862; Sergeant, Signal 
Corps, United States Army; served in Virginia and Louisiana; 
mustered out of service, June 2, 1865. 



OF BRQWN tTNIVERSITY. 43 

CI^ASS OF 1863 

William Ames. Second Lieutenant, Second Rhode Island 
Volunteers, June 6, 1861; First Lieutenant, October 25, 1861; 
Captain, July 24, 1862; Major, Third Rhode Island Heavy Artil- 
lery, January 28, 1863; Lieutenant Colonel, March 22, 1864; 
Colonel, October 10, 1864; Chief of Artillery, Department of 
South Carolina; served in Maryland, Virginia and South Caro- 
lina; mustered out of service, August 27, 1865. 

William B. Avery. Private, Company A, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 2, 1861; Master's Mate, 
United States Navy, December 25, 1861; Second Lieutenant, New 
York Marine Artillery, February 15, 1862; First Lieutenant, July 
1, 1862; Captain, August 1, 1862; Chief of Artillery, on General 
Ledlie's staff, January 17, 1863; Acting Ensign, United States 
Navy, June 15, 1863; served in North and South Atlantic Block- 
ading Squadrons; passed an examination as Acting Master, and 
honorably discharged, August 10, 1865. 

Charles E. Bailey. Private, Company D, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 30, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 2, 1861. 

Daniel R. Ballou. Sergeant Major, Twelfth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, October 13, 1862; Second Lieutenant, Company G, 
November 20, 1862; served in Virginia; resigned, April 25, 1863. 

William W. Bliss. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; mustered out of service with 
regiment, September 1, 1862; Private, Company B, One Hun- 
dred and Seventy-sixth New York Volunteers, September 11, 
1862; First Sergeant, December 18, 1862; Sergeant Major, March 
1, 1863; Second Lieutenant, August 20, 1863; Captain, First 
Corps d' Afrique, Engineers, September 2, 1863; Lieutenant 
Colonel, Eighty-seventh United States Infantry (colored), Sep- 
tember 28, 1864; served in Virginia, Mississippi, Louisiana and 
Texas; resigned, September 7, 1865. 



44 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

Amos M. Bowen. Private, Company A, First Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 2, 1861; captured at the battle of Bull Run, July 
21, 1861; a prisoner at Richmond, Virginia, and Salisbury, North 
Carolina; exchanged. May 22, 1862; First Lieutenant, Second 
Rhode Island Volunteers, January 22, 1863; Aide-de-Camp on 
the staff of General Eustis; served in Virginia; mustered out, 
June 17, 1864, term of service having expired. 

Joseph M. Bradley. Private, First Light Battery, Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with battery, August 6, 1861. 

Charles R. Brayton. First Lieutenant, Third Rhode 
Island Heavy Artillery, August 27, 1861; Captain, November 28, 
1862; Lieutenant Colonel, October 22, 1863; Colonel, March 22, 
1864; served in the Department of the South; mustered out, 
October 5, 1864, term of service having expired. 

Edward P. Brown. Second Lieutenant, Fourth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, August 27, 1862; First Lieutenant, January 4, 
1863; Captain, March 2, 1863; Acting Assistant Commissary of 
Subsistence, First Brigade, Second Division, Seventh Army Corps, 
July 28, 1863; Acting Inspector General, Port of Williamsburg, 
Virginia, May 15, 1864; Aide-de-Camp, First Brigade, Second 
Division, Ninth Army Corps, July 4, 1864; Acting Assistant 
Inspector General of the same brigade, August 19, 1864; Acting 
Assistant Inspector General, Third Division, Ninth Army Corps, 
March 26, 1865; Brevet Major, April 2, 1865; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service, June 5, 1865. 

David E. N. Carleton. Corporal, Company B, Forty- 
eighth Massachusetts Volunteers, August 21, 1862; served in the 
Department of the Gulf; was in the assault on Port Hudson; 
mustered out of service with regiment, September 3, 1863. 

Charles C. Cragin. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; mustered out of service with 
regiment, September 1, 1862; Captain, Eleventh United States 
Heavy Artillery (colored), December 5, 1863; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service with regiment, October 2, 1865. 



OP BROWN UNIVERSITY. 45 

Augustus N. Cunningham. Sergeant, Company D, Sec- 
ond Rhode Island Volunteers, June 5, 1861; First Lieutenant, 
Company H, Seventy-eighth New York Volunteers, December 23, 
1861; Captain, February 30, 1862, but not mustered; mustered 
out of service, July 13, 1865. 

Joseph H. Curtis. Private, Company F, Forty-fourth 
Massachusetts Volunteers, August, 1862; served in North Caro- 
lina; mustered out of service with regiment, June 18, 1863. 

Edward P. Deacon. Aide-de-Camp on the staff of Major 
General Heintzleman, commanding the Third Army Corps, May, 
1862; Captain, Second United States Cavalry, February, 1864; 
June, 1864, ordered to duty with the Eighteenth Army Corps; 
Acting Aide-de-Camp to Brevet Major General Devens, command- 
ing the Third Division, Twenty-fourth Army Corps; twice ofl&cer 
at Aiken's Landing, Virginia; Brevet Major, United States Vol- 
unteers; Brevet Lieutenant Colonel; served in Virginia and Mary- 
land; mustered out of service, June 25, 1865. 

Samuel R. Dorrance. Sergeant, Company D, Tenth 
Rhode Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mus- 
tered out of service, July 15, 1862. 

Sherburne B. Eaton. First Lieutenant and Adjutant, 
One Hundred and Twenty-fourth Ohio Volunteers, October 1, 
1862; Captain, Company F, May 23, 1863; resigned, November 
4, 1864. In the report of Brigadier General W. B. Hazen, under 
date of September 14, 1864 {Official Records of the Union and Con- 
federate Armies) , he is mentioned as follows: "Captain Sherburne 
B. Eaton, 124th Ohio Volunteers, of my staff, was severely 
wounded while assisting at the crossing of Peach Tree Creek, 
July 19. He is an officer of rare intelligence and merit." 

Forest F. Emerson. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Henry G. Gay. Private, Tenth Rhode Island Volunteers, 
May 26, 1862; mustered out of service with regiment, September 



46 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

1, 1862; Private, Company F, Twenty-sixth Connecticut Volun- 
teers, September 3, 1862; First Sergeant, September 19, 1862; 
wounded at Port Hudson, Louisiana, June 13, 1863; served in 
Virginia and Louisiana; mustered out of service with regiment; 
Second Lieutenant, August 17, 1863, but not mustered on account 
of expiration of service. 

Monroe Goode. Private, Company B, Twenty-second 
Mississippi (Confederate) Infantry, known as Hinds County Light 
Guards, early part of 1861, and with the forces operating around 
Vicksburg until the siege of Vicksburg, in 1863; he was killed in 
front of Atlanta, Georgia, at the battle of Peach Tree Creek, July 
20, 1864. 

Charles W. Greene. Private, Thirty-fifth Massachusetts 
Volunteers, July 25, 1862; Captain, Company F, One Hundred 
and Sixteenth United States Infantry (colored), July 21, 1864; 
served in Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee 
and Texas; mustered out of service, July 8, 1865. 

James E. Hall. Sergeant, Eighteenth Maine Volunteers, 
August 4, 1862; Second Lieutenant, Company G, First Maine 
Heavy Artillery; served in Virginia; killed in action in the 
assault near Petersburg, Virginia, June 18, 1864. 

John J. Holmes. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Hervey F. Jacobs. Second Lieutenant, Company F, 
Twenty-sixth Connecticut Volunteers, August 29, 1862; wound- 
ed in the assault upon Port Hudson, Louisiana, June 14, 1863, 
and died, July 5, 1863; served in the Department of the Gulf. 

J. Albert Monroe. First Lieutenant, First Rhode Island 
Light Artillery, June 6, 1861; Captain, September 7, 1861; Major, 
October 21, 1862; Lieutenant Colonel, December 4, 1862; Chief 
of Artillery, Ninth Army Corps; served in Virginia; mustered 
out, October 5, 1864, term of service having expired. 

Alexander Peckham. Private, Company L, Ninth Rhode 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 47 

Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 2, 1862. 

Duncan A. Pell. Private, Company A, First Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 2, 1861; mustered out of service with regiment, 
August 2, 1861; Lieutenant and Volunteer Aide-de-Camp on staff 
of Major General Burnside, December 1, 1861; Captain, April 4, 
1862; Brevet Major, December 2, 1864; Brevet Lieutenant Colonel, 
March 13, 1865; Brevet Colonel, April 2, 1865; served in North 
Carolina, Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Mississippi and Ten- 
nessee; mustered out of service at the close of the war. 

George W. Potter. Private, Battery G. First Rhode 
Island Light Artillery, February 26, 1862; re-enlisted as a Vet- 
eran Volunteer, March 4, 1864; wounded in the assault at Peters- 
burg, Virginia, April 2, 1865, and was mustered out with the 
battery, June 24, 1865. For gallantry at Petersburg on April 2, 
1865, he was awarded the Congressional medal of honor. 

S. Hartwell Pratt. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Livingston Scott. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; mustered out of service with 
regiment, September 1, 1862; First Lieutenant and Adjutant, 
Third Rhode Island Cavalry, July 1, 1863; Captain, January 2, 
1864; served in Virginia and Louisiana; mustered out of service 
with regiment, November 29, 1865. 

Orville B. Seagrave. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862; Acting Assistant 
Paymaster, United States Navy, October 19, 1863; served in the 
West Gulf and South Atlantic Blockading Squadrons; honorably 
discharged October 18, 1865. 

Orsmus a. Taft. Corporal, Company E, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 



48 CIVIL, WAR RECORD 

Andrew F. Warren, Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Richard Waterman. Private, Company C, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; mustered out of service with 
regiment, August 2, 1861; First Lieutenant, Company F, First 
Rhode Island Cavalry, October 4, 1861; resigned, December 5,. 
1862; served in Maryland and Virginia. 

CLASS OF 1864 

Seth J. AxTELL. Corporal, Fifty-first Massachusetts Vol- 
unteers, August 25, 1862; served in North Carolina; mustered 
out of service with regiment, July 21, 1863. 

W. Whitman Bailey. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service on account of sickness, July 15, 1862. 

George B. Barrows. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Edward R. Blanch ard. Private, First Massachusetts Cav- 
alry, August, 1861, but was discharged as a minor, December, 
1861; Private, Forty-fourth Massachusetts Volunteers, August 
29, 1862; served in North Carolina; mustered out of service 
with regiment, June 18, 1863. 

Edson C. Chick. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

John S. Chick. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment. September 1, 1862. 

Harry C. Cushing. Corporal, Battery A, First Rhode 
Island Light Artillery, June 6, 1861; Second Lieutenant, Battery 
F, Fourth United States Artillery, November 1, 1861; First Lieu- 



OP BROWN UNIVERSITY. 49 

tenant, Battery H, Fourth United States Artillery; Brevet First 
Lieutenant, United States Army; Brevet Captain; Brevet Major; 
served in Virginia, Maryland and Tennessee; remained in the 
service after the close of the war. 

Edgar J. Doe. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

John K. Dorrance. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; mustered out of service with 
regiment, September 1, 1862; Second Lieutenant, Second Rhode 
Island Volunteers, September 15, 1864; First Lieutenant, Decem- 
ber 5, 1864; wounded before Petersburg, Virginia, April 2, 1865; 
Brevet First Lieutenant, April 2, 1865; Brevet Captain, March 
13, 1865; served in Virginia; mustered out of service, June 20, 
1865. 

G. Lyman Dwight. Corporal, Battery A, First Rhode 
Island Light Artillery, June 6, 1861; Second Lieutenant, Battery 
B, November 29, 1861; First Lieutenant, Battery A, November 4, 
1862; Acting Assistant Adjutant General, Artillery Brigade, Sec- 
ond Army Corps; served in Maryland and Virginia; mustered 
out of service, September 30, 1864. 

John D. Edgell. Corporal, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; mustered out of service with 
regiment, September 1, 1862; Second Lieutenant, Company F, 
Fifty-third Massachusetts Volunteers, September 12, 1862; served 
in Virginia and Louisiana; mustered out of service with regiment, 
September 2, 1863. 

David Fales. Corporal, Company I, Forty-fifth Massa- 
chusetts Volunteers, September 17, 1862; served in North Caro- 
lina; mustered out of service with regiment, July 8, 1863. 

Simeon Gallup. Corporal, Battery F, First Rhode Island 
Light Artillery. October 29, 1861; Sergeant; served in Virginia 



50 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

and Maryland; mustered out of service, October 28, 1864, at the 
end of enlistment. 

Clarence T. Gardner. Private, Company E, First Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 2, 1861; mustered out of service with 
regiment, August 2, 1861; First Sergeant, Company H, Third 
Rhode Island Heavy Artillery, October 5, 1861; Second Lieuten- 
ant, July 8, 1862; First Lieutenant, January 21, 1863; detached 
for service with Battery B, First United States Light Artillery, 
March 24, 1863; served in Virginia and South Carolina; resigned, 
October 24, 1863; United States Contract Surgeon, Army of the 
Potomac, from March 4, 1865, until June 4, 1865. 

Albert E. Ham. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Henry L. Hammond. Contract Surgeon, United States 
Army, March 4, 1865; his service closed June 5, 1865. 

Charles L. Harrington. Private, Taylor's Battery, First 
Illinois Artillery Regiment, May, 1862; served in Tennessee; 
died near Lafayette, Tennessee, June 25, 1862. 

Frank T. Hazlewood. Private, Company A, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

David A. Holmes. Corporal, Company A, Third Rhode 
Island Heavy Artillery, August 20, 1861; First Lieutenant, Sec- 
ond Rhode Island Volunteers, March 3, 1863; served in South 
Carolina, Georgia and Virginia; resigned, August 18, 1863. 

John S. Holmes. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Wendell P. Hood. Private, Company A, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862; Hospital Stew- 
ard, Forty-eighth Massachusetts Volunteers, November 7, 1862; 
mustered out of service with regiment, September 3, 1863. 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 51 

Ephraim H, Jenckes. Corporal, Company F, First Rhode 
Island Cavalry, November 27, 1861; Quartermaster Sergeant, July 
17, 1862; discharged at Washington, District of Columbia, for 
disability, November, 1862. 

Benjamin D. Jones. Corporal, Fourth Rhode Island Volun- 
teers, October 30, 1861; wounded at the battle of Antietam, Sep- 
tember 17, 1862; Second Lieutenant, Eleventh United States 
Heavy Artillery (colored), December 5, 1863; served in North 
Carolina, Virginia, Maryland and Louisiana; mustered out of 
service, October, 1865. 

Henry H. Judson. Private, Company M, Fifteenth New 
York Heavy Artillery, January 28, 1864; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service, December 12, 1864. 

George H. Kenyon. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Oscar Lapham. Private, Twelfth Rhode Island Volun- 
teers, August 23, 1862; First Lieutenant, October 13, 1862; Aide- 
de-Camp to Colonel D. R. Wright, commanding First Brigade, 
Casey's Division, November 7, 1862; Adjutant, Twelfth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, December 27, 1862; Captain, March 29, 1863; 
served in Virginia; mustered out of service with regiment, July 
29. 1863. 

Henry S. Latham. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Frank W. Love. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Horace W. Love. Second Lieutenant, Third Rhode Island 
Heavy Artillery, July 8, 1862; served in the Department of the 
South; resigned, June 12, 1863. 

Roger W. Love. Private, Third Rhode Island Heavy 
Artillery, April 3, 1862; Sergeant Major, July 1, 1864; served in 



52 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

the Department of the South; mustered out of service with regi- 
ment, April 12, 1865. 

Matthew M. Meggett. Private, Company B, Tenth 
Rhode Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; died at Fort Pennsylva- 
nia, near Washington, District of Columbia, August 18, 1862. 

George B. Peck. Second Lieutenant, Second Rhode Island 
Volunteers, December 13, 1864; wounded at the battle of Sailor's 
Creek, Virginia, April 6, 1865; served in Virginia; resigned June 
30, 1865. 

Mattson C. Sanborn. First Lieutenant, Twentieth Maine 
Volunteers, August 29, 1862; served in Maryland and Virginia; 
mustered out of service with regiment, June 4, 1865. 

Nathaniel T. Sanders. Private, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Eugene Sanger. Private, Thirty-eighth Massachusetts 
Volunteers, August, 1862; served in the Department of the Gulf; 
died of wounds received in action at Fort Bisland, Louisiana, 
April 12, 1863. 

A. JuDSON Shurtleff. Private, Company I, Ninth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 2, 1862. 

T. Delap Smith. Private, Company A, First Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 29, 1861; taken prisoner at the battle of Bull 
Run, July 21, 1861; Hospital Steward, United States Army; in 
the service of the United States until the end of the war. 

John Tetlow. Corporal, Company B, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Francis M. Tyler. Private, Company H, Ninth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 2, 1862; Sergeant, Nine- 
teenth Unattached Company, Massachusetts Militia, August 8, 
1864; mustered out of service with company, November 16, 1864. 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 53 

William H. Underhill. Private, Company K, Tenth 
Rhode Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mus- 
tered out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

IvOUis O. Walker. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

CLASS OF 1865 

Zephaniah Brown. Corporal, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; mustered out of service with 
regiment, September 1, 1862; First Lieutenant, Eleventh United 
States Heavy Artillery (colored), October 24, 1863; Acting 
Adjutant of First Battalion; served in Virginia and Louisiana; 
resigned, June 1, 1865. 

Israel M. Bullock. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Charles M. Corbin. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

William P. Davis. Corporal, Company G, Ninth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 2, 1862. 

James Dingwell. Private, Company I, Eleventh Rhode 
Island Volunteers, October 1, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, July 13, 1863. 

Frederic A. Dockray, Second Lieutenant, Company I, 
Third Rhode Island Heavy Artillery, February 11, 1862; served 
in the Department of the South; resigned, June 12, 1862. 

James G. Dougherty. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

George B. Hanna. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 



54 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

William C. Ives. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Francis J. Leonard. Private, Company B, Sixth Con- 
necticut Volunteers, September 11, 1863; mustered out of service 
with regiment, June 20, 1865. 

George H. Messer. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Robert H. Paine. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

J. Ammon Price. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

HosEA M. QuiMBY. Sergeant, Twenty-seventh Maine Vol- 
unteers, September 14, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, July 17, 1863. 

George W. Shaw. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Welcome A. Smith. Private, Company F, Twenty-sixth 
Connecticut Volunteers, September 20, 1862; served in the Depart- 
ment of the Gulf; mustered out of service with regiment, August 
17, 1863. 

Hebron H. Steere. Second Lieutenant, First Rhode 
Island Cavalry, June 14, 1863; First Lieutenant, May 19, 1865; 
served in Maryland and Virginia; mustered out of service with 
regiment, August 3, 1865. 

Caleb E. Thayer. Corporal, Company C, Tenth Rhode 



« 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 55 

Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Levi C. Walker. Private, Company G, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. He returned to 
Providence with the sick of his regiment, but the disease he had 
contracted while in the service retained its hold upon him, and 
he died February 23, 1864. 

Joseph Ward. Private, Company D, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

RuFus Waterman. United States Naval Academy, Annap- 
olis, Maryland, September 25, 1861; Midshipman, and as such, 
while connected with the academy, saw service in the Civil War 
and is so credited by the Navy Department at Washington. 

William C. Witter. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

CLASS OF 1866 

James W. Blackwood. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

George B. Blodgette. Private, Company D, Forty-eighth 
Massachusetts Volunteers, August 18, 1862; served in Louisiana 
and Virginia; mustered out of service with regiment, September 
3, 1863. 

Benezet a. Hough. Private, Company B, Twenty-fourth 
Connecticut Volunteers, August 25, 1862; Sergeant, October 25, 
1862; served in the Department of the Gulf; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 30, 1863. 

Edwin B. Fiske. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 



56 civil. WAR RECORD 

Hervey a. Foster. Corporal, Company D, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

N. Newton Glazier. Private, Company G, Eleventh Ver- 
mont Volunteers, later First Vermont Heavy Artillery; Corporal, 
November 23, 1862; Acting Ordnance Sergeant; Second Lieuten- 
ant, Company A, November 2, 1863; First Lieutenant, January 
21, 1864; wounded at Spottsylvania Court House, Virginia (lost 
left arm), May 18, 1864; served in Virginia; discharged on 
account of wounds, September 3, 1864. 

Edward K. Glezen. Sergeant Major, Tenth Rhode Island 
Volunteers, June 9, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

WiLUAM H. Spencer. First Sergeant, Company C, Sixty- 
first New York Volunteers, September 6, 1861; Second Lieuten- 
ant, Company A, January 8, 1862; First Lieutenant, Company I, 
January 24, 1862; Captain, Company G, May 12, 1862; wounded 
at Charles City Cross Roads, Virginia (right leg amputated), 
June 30, 1862; Major, November 17, 1862; served in Virginia; 
discharged for disability, December 29, 1862. 

CLASS OF 1867 

Phanuel S. Bishop. First Lieutenant, Company B, Elev- 
enth United States Heavy Artillery (colored), September 14, 
1863; Captain, November 9, 1864; served in the Department of 
the Gulf; mustered out of service with regiment, October 2, 1865. 

James P. Brown. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; mustered out of service with 
regiment, September 1, 1862; Second Lieutenant, Company H, 
Eleventh United States Heavy Artillery (colored), December 31, 
1863; served in Virginia and Louisiana; died at Donaldson, 
Louisiana, August 23, 1865. 

Elmer L. Corthell. Private, First Rhode Island Light 
Artillery, May 15, 1861; Corporal, August, 1861; Sergeant, Bat- 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 57 

tery F, September, 1861; Second Lieutenant, Battery H, October 
11, 1862; First Lieutenant, Battery G, November 11, 1863; Cap- 
tain, Battery D, November 2, 1864; served in North Carolina, 
Maryland and Virginia; mustered out of service with battery, 
July 17, 1865. 

Henry Crocker. Private, Company H, Ninth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 2, 1862. 

Joseph F. Fielden. Private, Sixtieth Massachusetts Vol- 
unteers, July 15, 1864; served in the Department of the Ohio; 
mustered out of service, December 4, 1864. 

James N. Granger. First Lieutenant, Company H, Sec- 
ond Rhode Island Volunteers, 1864; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, July 13, 1865. 

Frederic B. Hall. Private, Seventeenth Connecticut Vol- 
unteers, August 10, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered out of 
service, August 8, 1863. 

William R. Harmount. First Lieutenant, Twenty-seventh 
Connecticut Volunteers, October 4, 1862; served in Pennsylvania, 
Maryland and Virginia; mustered out of service with regiment, 
July 27, 1863. 

Charles E. Harvey. Seaman, United States Navy, Sep- 
tember 9, 1862; on blockading service; discharged August 18, 
1863. 

William H. Hawkes. Private, Company B, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; discharged from the service as 
a minor, July 8, 1862. 

Joseph D. Kirby. Corporal, Third Massachusetts Volun- 
teers, May 4, 1864; mustered out of service with regiment, Aug- 
ust 2, 1864. 

James McWhinnie, Jr. Sergeant, Twentieth Connecticut 
Volunteers, August 6, 1862; wounded in the battle of Chancel- 
lorsville, Virginia, May 2, 1863; served in Virginia; discharged 
on account of wounds (left leg amputated), May 4, 1864. 



58 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

Martin S. Smith. Second Lieutenant, Company K, Elev- 
enth United States Heavy Artillery (colored), January 8, 1864; 
served in the Department of the Gulf; mustered out of service 
with regiment, October 2, 1865. 

John C. Sullivan. Sergeant, Fourth Massachusetts Vol- 
unteers, September 9, 1862; served in Louisiana; mustered out 
of service with regiment, August 29, 1863. 

Henry A. Winn. Private, Sixth Massachusetts Volunteers, 
July 15, 1864; served in Virginia; mustered out of service with 
regiment, October 25, 1865. 

CLASS OF 1868 

Sabin T. Goodell. Private, One Hundred and Fifty- 
seventh Pennsylvania Volunteers, August 18, 1863; Second Lieu- 
tenant, Twenty-first United States Infantry (colored), October 
17, 1864; First Lieutenant, August 17, 1865; served in the 
Department of the South; mustered out of service, April 25, 1866. 

George R. Read. Private, Forty-seventh Massachusetts 
Volunteers, August 30, 1862; served in the Department of the 
Gulf; mustered out of service, August 30, 1863. 

Xenophon D. Tingley. Private, Company I, Eleventh 
Rhode Island Volunteers, September 15, 1862; served in Virginia; 
mustered out of service, July 13, 1863. 

CLASS OF 1869 

James C. Butterworth. Private, Company K, Third 
Rhode Island Heavy Artillery, October 5, 1861; served in the 
Department of the Gulf; mustered out, October 5, 1864, at expi- 
ration of service. 

Joseph H. Cowell. Private, One Hundred and Thirty- 
ninth Illinois Volunteers, May 1, 1864; served in the Middle 
Department; mustered out of service, December 1, 1864. 

Alvin M. Crane. Second Lieutenant, Twenty-first Con- 
necticut Volunteers, September 5, 1862; Captain, October 12, 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 59 

1864; served in Virginia and North Carolina; mustered out of 
service, June 20, 1865. 

Albert R. Greene. Private, Company K, Eleventh 
Rhode Island Volunteers, September 25, 1862; mustered out of 
service with regiment, July 13, 1863; First Lieutenant, Seventy- 
eighth New York Volunteers; Aide-de-Camp on the staff of Third 
Brigade, Second Division, Thirteenth Army Corps; served in Vir- 
ginia and in the Department of the Cumberland; mustered out of 
service, July 11, 1864. 

John C. Hopkins. Private, Company K, Tenth Rhode 
Island Volunteers, May 26, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, September 1, 1862. 

Dura P. Morgan. Private, Eleventh New Hampshire Vol- 
unteers, August 26, 1862; Hospital Steward, United States Army, 
June 21, 1864; served in the Army of the Potomac; mustered out 
of service, June 30, 1866. 

William T. Richmond. Private, Fifteenth Independent 
Company, Massachusetts Volunteers, July 25, 1864; mustered 
out of service, November 11, 1864. 

CLASS OF 1870 

Elisha B. Andrews. Private, First Connecticut Heavy 
Artillery, April 30, 1861; Second Lieutenant, August 27, 1863; 
wounded in front of Petersburg, Virginia, August 24, 1864; with 
loss of one eye, mustered out of service, October 29, 1864. 

James H. Arthur. Private, Seventh Connecticut Volun- 
teers, August 19, 1862; wounded at Fort Wagner, Charleston 
Harbor, June 11, 1863; served in the Department of the South; 
mustered out of service, September 20, 1864. 

James B. T. Chase. First Lieutenant, Company K, Twen- 
ty-sixth United States Infantry (colored). May 18, 1864; Captain, 
Company D, One Hundred and Fourth United States Infantry 
(colored), June 22, 1865; served in South Carolina; mustered out 
of service, November 7, 1865. 



60 CIVIL WAR RECORD 

Irving W. Coombs. Private, Fifteenth New Hampshire 
Volunteers, October 21, 1862; served in Louisiana; mustered out 
of service, August 12, 1863. 

Newell T. Button. Private, Ninth New Hampshire Vol- 
unteers, August 6, 1862; Sergeant Major, February 1, 1865; 
served in Maryland, Virginia, Kentucky, Mississippi and Ten- 
nessee; mustered out of service with regiment, June 15, 1865. 

Thomas G. Field. Corporal, Eighty-fifth Ohio Volun- 
teers, May 15, 1862; served in the Department of the Ohio; mus- 
tered out of service, September 28, 1862, 

William H. Fish. Corporal, One Hundred and Forty- 
fourth New York Volunteers, September 6, 1862; First Lieuten- 
ant, Twenty-first United States Infantry (colored), February 9, 
1865; served in the Department of the South; mustered out of 
service, April 25, 1866. 

Lewis Munger. Private, Second Connecticut Heavy Artil- 
lery, July 22, 1862; Second Lieutenant, March 15, 1864; First 
Lieutenant, February 4, 1865; Brevet Captain, April 2, 1865; 
served in Virginia; mustered out of service, August 18, 1865. 

Isaac P. Noyes. Private, Battery H, First Rhode Island 
Light Artillery, October 14, 1862; served in the Army of the 
Potomac; mustered out of service with battery, June 28, 1865. 

Peter B. Shiere. Private, Company I, Eleventh Rhode 
Island Volunteers, October 1, 1862; served in Virginia; mustered 
out of service with regiment, July 13, 1863. 

Alonzo Williams. Company A, First Rhode Island Heavy 
Artillery, October 5, 1861; Corporal, May 4, 1862; Sergeant, 
January 1, 1863; mustered as a Veteran Volunteer, January 30, 
1864; First Sergeant, Company A, July 6, 1865; Second Lieuten- 
ant, but not mustered; served in the Department of the South, 
which included South Carolina, Georgia and Florida; mustered 
out of service with regiment, August 4, 1865. 

Prentiss M. Woodman. Private, Twenty-ninth Maine 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 61 

Volunteers, March 20, 1865; mustered out of service, May 10, 
1865. 

CI.ASS OF 1871 
Daniel Hoyt. Private, Company M, Fourth Massachu- 
setts Heavy Artillery, August 23, 1864; served in Maryland and 
Virginia; mustered out of service with regiment, June 17, 1865. 

CLASSOF1872 

Orson P. Bestor. Private, Company D, Sixty-ninth Illi- 
nois Volunteers, June 6, 1862; mustered out of service with 
regiment, October 6, 1862. 

John D. Smith. Private, Company F, Nineteenth Maine 
Volunteers, August 8, 1862; wounded near Petersburg, Virginia, 
July 23, 1864; served in Virginia and Pennsylvania; mustered 
out of service as Corporal, April 16, 1865. 

CLASS OF 1873 
Daniel Rhodes. Private, Third Rhode Island Volunteers, 
June 29, 1864; Sergeant; served in the Department of the Gulf; 
mustered out of service with regiment, November 29, 1865. 

CLASS OF 1874 
Alfred B. Whitney. Private, Eleventh Massachusetts 
Light Battery, December 19, 1863; served in the Army of the 
Potomac until the surrender at Appomattox; mustered out of 
service with battery, June 25, 1865. 



62 



CIVIL WAR RECORD 



THE ROLL ENUMERATED BY CLASSES 



Class of 


Number 

in 
Service. 


Class of 


Number 

in 
Service. 


1825 


1 


1852 


11 


1826 


1 


1853 


9 


1829 


3 


1854 


18 


1830 


1 


1855 


16 


1832 


1 


1856 


16 


1834 


1 


1857 


11 


1835 


1 


1858 


19 


1836 


1 


1859 


22 


1837 


2 


1860 


24 


1838 


2 


1861 


31 


1839 


4 


1862 


20 


1840 


5 


1863 


33 


1841 


4 


1864 


41 


1842 


1 


1865 


22 


1843 


4 


1866 


8 


1844 


4 


1867 


15 


1845 


2 


1868 


3 


1846 


3 


1869 


7 


1847 


8 


1870 


12 


1848 


6 


1871 


1 


1849 


7 


1872 


2 


1850 


5 


1873 


1 


1851 


7 


1874 


1 



417 



OF BROWN UNIVERSITY. 



63 



ROLL OK 

THE THIRTY-NINE 

GRADUATES AND NON-GRADUATES OF 

BROWN UNIVERSITY 

Who Were in the Military or Naval Service 

In the Civil War, 

And Died in the Service. 



Henry S. Newcomb, class of 1840, 
Origen S. Jewett, class of 1841, . 
Joshua J. Ellis, class of 1847, . 
Walter H. Judson, class of 1847, 
Fayette Clapp, class of 1848, 
Charles P. Price, class of 1850, . 
Francis W. Bird, class of 1851, . 
James B. Jordan, class of 1851, . 
Sullivan Ballou, class of 1852, . 
James E. Brown, class of 1852, . 
Miles J. Fletcher, class of 1852, 
Charles B. Randall, class of 1852, 
Edward P. Lawton, class of 1853, 
John A. Duvillard, class of 1854, 
Thomas P. Ives, class of 1854, . 
lyouis Bell, class of 1855, , 
Horace H. Brand, class of 1855, 
Addison W. Preston, class of 1855, 
Henry T. Bissell, class of 1857, 
Robert H. Ives, class of 1857, . 



PAGE 

4 
4 
7 
7 
8 

10 
10 
11 
12 
12 
12 
13 
14 
15 
16 
18 
18 
19 
23 
24 



64 



CIVIL WAR RECORD 



Josiah P, Stone, class of 1857, . 
Josiah G. Woodbury, class of 1857, 
Charles L. Kneass, class of 1858, 
Edward Bredell, class of 1859, . 
I,evi A. Tower, class of 1859, . 
William I,. Jones, class of 1860, 
Albert G. Washburn, class of 1860, 
Clingman Craig, class of 1861, . 
George C. Crutcher, class of 1861, 
James C. Williams, class of 1861, 
William I. Brown, class of 1862, 
Monroe Goode, class of 1863, 
James E. Hall, class of 1863, 
Hervey F. Jacobs, class of 1863, 
Charles L,. Harrington, class of 1864, 
Matthew M. Meggett, class of 1864, 
Eugene Sanger, class of 1864, . 
Levi C. Walker, class of 1865, . 
James P. Brown, class of 1867, . 



24 
24 
26 
28 
31 
33 
34 
36 
36 
39 
40 
46 
46 
46 
50 
52 
52 
55 
56 



INDEX. 



Abbott, Samuel W., 
Adams, George W., 
Adams, Henry S., 
Addeman, Joshua M., 
Alden, Charles H., 
Allen, Crawford, 
Allen, Ethan, 
Ames, William, 
Andrews, Elisha B., 
Andrews, Theodore, 
Ansley, Joseph A., 
Anthony, Thomas S., 
Arthur, James H., 
Avery, William B., 
Axtell, Seth J. , 

Babbitt, George H., 
Bailey, Charles E., 
Bailey, W. Whitman, 
Ballou, Daniel R., 
Ballou, Sullivan, 
Barker, Orville A., 
Barrows, George B., 
Bates, Caleb, 
Bell, James E., 
Bell, Louis, 
Bestor, Orson P., 
Bigelow, John W., 
Bird, Francis W., 
Bishop, Phanuel S., 
Bissell, Henry T., 
Blackwood, James W., 
Blake, John T., 
Blanchard, Edward R., 
Bliss, George N., 
Bliss, William W., 
Blodgette, George B., 
Bolles, John A., 
Bolles, Lucius S., 
Bolles, Nicholas B., 



24 


Bond, Emmons P., 


10 


20 


Boutell, Lewis H., 


5 


31 


Bowen, Amos M., 


44 


40 


Bowen, William E., 


27 


20 


Boyce, James P., 


7 


31 


Boyd, Charles H., 


15 


31 


Bradford, Frank S., 


13 


43 


Bradford, Horace 8., 


32 


59 


Bradley, Joseph M., 


44 


27 


Brand, Horace H., 


18 


27 


Brayton, Charles R,, 


44 


7 


Bredell, Edward, 


28 


59 


Briggs, Obil W., 


3 


43 


Bright, Osborn E., 


13 


48 


Britton, Alexander T., 


23 


40 
43 
48 
43 
12 
35 
48 
20 
6 
18 
61 


Brooks, Horace E., 


21 


Brown, Edward P., 


U 


Brown, James, 


10 


Brown, James E., 


12 


Brown, James P., 


56 


Brown, John H., 


35 


Brown, John K., 


18 


Brown, T. Frederic, 


40 


Brown, William J., 


40 


Brown, Zephaniah, 


53 


Browne, George H., 


3 


Brownell, William R., 


9 


18 
10 


Bucklyn, John K., 


35 


Bullock, Israel M., 


53 


56 
23 

55 
40 


Burrage, Henry S., 


35 


Burrows, Christopher C. , 


36 


Butterworth, James C, 


58 


48 


Campbell, Albert H., 


7 


32 


Carlton, Caleb H., 


23 


43 


Carleton, David E. N., 


44 


55 


Carpenter, Benoni, 


1 


1 


Carpenter, Frank H., 


36 


27 


Carr, George W., 


23 


21 


Caswell, Thomas T., 


36 



66 



INDEX. 



Chapman, Charles H., 


36 


Dougherty, James G., 


53 


Chase, James B. T., 


59 


Douglas, William W., 


37 


Cheever, Tracy P., 


5 


Draper, Frank W. , 


40 


Cheney, Frank W., 


15 


Duncan, Samuel W., 


32 


Chick, Edson C. , 


48 


Dutton, Newell T., 


60 


Chick, John S., 


48 


Duvillard, John A., 


15 


Clapp, Fayette, 


8 


D wight, G. Lyman, 


49 


Clark, Edward Iv., 


25 


Dyer, Elisha, 


1 


Clark, Joseph B., 


8 


Dyer, Elisha, Jr. , 


25 


Clarke, Augustus P., 
Cobb, Stephen A. , 
Coffin, Rufus, 
Comfort, Charles L., 
Congdon, Walter, 
Coombs, Irving W., 
Corbin, Charles M., 
Corbin, David P., 
Corthell, Elmer h., 


36 

25 

3 

23 

25 
60 
53 
32 
56 


Eaton, Sherburne B. , 
Eddy, William, 
Edgell, John D., 
Edsall, T. Henry 
Ellis, Joshua J., 
Ely, William G., 
Emerson, Forest F. , 
Ewing, Thomas, Jr., 


45 
28 
49 
37 
7 

16 
45 
21 


Couper, Alexander W., 


15 


Fales, David, 


49 


Cowell, Joseph H., 


58 


Field, Thomas G., 


60 


Craig, Clingman, 


36 


Fielden, Joseph F., 


57 


Cragin, Charles C, 


44 


Fish, William H., 


60 


Crane, Alvin M., 


58 


Fiske, Edwin B., 


55 


Crawford, Henderson, 


21 


Fletcher, Miles J., 


12 


Crocker, George A., 


14 


Fletcher, Samuel J. , 


23 


Crocker, Henry, 


57 


Foster, Hervey A. , 


56 


Crutcher, George C, 
Cunningham, Augustus N., 
Curtis, Joseph H., 
Cushing, Harry C, 
Cushman, Austin S., 
Cutts, James M., 


36 
45 
45 
48 
8 
21 


Gallup, Simeon, 
Gardner, Clarence T. , 
Gay, Henry G., 
Gifford, Sanford, 
Glazier, N. Newton, 
Glezen, Edward K., 


49 

50 
45 
6 
56 
56 


Davis, William P., 


53 


Goddard, Francis W., 


16 


Deacon, Edward P., 


45 


Goddard, Josiah R., 


41 


De Marini, George C, 


16 


Goddard, R. H. I., 


25 


Denison, Frederic, 


7 


Goddard, William, 


6 


DeWolf, James A., 


37 


Goode, Monroe, 


46 


DeWolf, J. Halsey, 


21 


Goodell, Sabin T., 


58 


Dexter, Arthur F., 


15 


Granger, James N., 


57 


Diman, Henry W., 


13 


Green, Arnold, 


26 


Dingwell, James, 


53 


Greene, Albert R., 


59 


Dockray, Frederic A. , 


53 


Greene, Charles W., 


46 


Doe, Edgar J., 


49 


Grier, William P., 


18 


Dorrance, John K., 


49 


Grosvenor, James B. M., 


41 


Dorrance, Samuel R., 


45 


Gushee, Edward M., 


26 



INDEX. 



67 



Hale, William M., 
Hall, Frederic B., 
Hall, James E., 
Hall, Robert, 
Ham, Albert E., 
Hammond, Henry L., 
Hanna, George B. , 
Harmount, William R., 
Harris, James, 
Harrington, Charles h., 
Hart, Henry C, 
Hartridge, Julian, 
Hartwell, Foster, 
Harvey, Charles E., 
Haskell, John G., 
Hathaway, George W., 
Hawkes, William H., 
Hay, John, 

Hazlewood, Frank T., 
Henderson, George D., 
Henderson, Robert J., 
Henshaw, Charles H. , 
Hidden, Charles H., 
Hilton, Robert B., 
Holden, Levi H., 
Holmes, David A., 
Holmes, John J., 
Holmes, John S. , 
Hood, Wendell P., 
Hopkins, John C, 
Hoppin, William W., 
Hosmer, Charles E. , 
Hough, Benezet A., 
Howard, Harris, 
Howe, Charles H., 
Hoyt, Daniel, 
Humeston, Luther F., 
Hutchins, Benjamin T., 

Ives, Robert H., 
Ives, Thomas P., 
Ives, William C, 

Jacobs, Hervey F., 
Jameson, ThorndikeC. , 
Jastram, Pardon S., 



4 


Jenckes, Ephraim H., 


51 


57 


Jenckes, Leland D., 


37 


46 


Jenkins, Moses B., 


18 


10 


Jewett, Origen S., 


4 


50 


Johnson, Francis C, 


5 


50 


Johnson, Rodolphus H., 


41 


53 


Johnson, Thomas H., 


8 


57 


Jones, Benjamin D., 


51 


7 


Jones, William L,., 


33 


50 


Jordan, James B., 


11 


12 


Judson, Adoniram B., 


28 


9 


Judson, Henry H., 


51 


2 


Judson, Walter H., 


7 


57 

26 

1 


Keen, William W., 


28 


Kelly, Jason B., 


41 


57 


Kenyon, George H., 


51 


26 


King, Charles G., 


33 


50 


King, E. Porter, 


6 


14 


Kirby, Joseph D., 


57 


26 


Kneass, Charles L., 


26 


14 


Kollock, Cornelius, 


9 


37 


Ivane, Henry F., 


10 


5 


Lapham, Oscar, 


51 


2 


lyatham, Henry S., 


51 


50 


Lawton, Edward P., 


14 


46 


Lemon, George W. , 


22 


50 


Leonard, Francis J., 


54 


50 


Leland, Francis, 


3 


59 


Lippitt, Francis J., 


2 


37 


Lothrop, Charles H., 


22 


37 


Love, Horace W., 


51 


55 


Love, Frank W., 


51 


32 


Love, Roger W., 


51 


22 


Lyman, Moses, 


26 


61 
11 

28 


Magenis, Arthur J., 


18 


Mansfield, Francis, 


26 


Mason, Augustus, 


4 


24 


Mason, Charles F., 


38 


16 


Mason, George E., 


41 


54 


Mauran, Antoine J., 


11 




Maxson, Darwin E., 


12 


46 


McWhinnie, James, Jr., 


57 


4 


Meggett, Mathew M., 


52 


32 


Meigs, Joseph L., 


33 



68 



INDEX. 



Mellen, Joshua, 


41 


Pollard, Andrew C, 


33 


Mendenhall, Charles, 


38 


Pope, Charles H., 


24 


Messer, George H., 


54 


Porter, George !<., 


30 


Metcalf, Edwin, 


5 


Porter, Henry K., 


33 


Millar, Robert, 


27 


Potter, George W., 


47 


Miller, Horace G., 


33 


Potter, James B. M., 


3 


Mitchell, Edwin W., 


29 


Potter, Thomas M., 


2 


Mitchel, Frederick A., 


33 


Pratt, Iveonard B., 


14 


Monroe, J. Albert, 


46 


Pratt, S. Hart well. 


47 


Morgan, Dura P., 


59 


Preston, Addison W., 


19 


Morton, I^loyd, 


9 


Price, Charles P., 


10 


Mott, Frederic, 


11 


Price, J. Aramon, 


54 


Mowry, Elisha C, 
Mowry, William A., 


38 
27 


Quimby, Hosea M., 


54 


Munger, Enos, 


16 


Randall, Charles B., 


13 


Munger, I/ewis, 


60 


Read, George R., 


58 


Nelson, Aaron H., 
Newcomb, Charles K., 
Newcomb, Henry S. , 
Newhall, Timothy, 
Noyes, Isaac P., 
Noyes, Walter B., 


27 

2 

4 

8 

60 

27 


Reed, Nathan A., 
Remington, James H., 
Rhodes, Christopher, 
Rhodes, Daniel, 
Rhodes, Frank A., 
Richmond, Lewis, 
Richmond, Nathaniel P., 


30 
42 
42 
61 
22 
5 
17 


Olcott, Egbert, 


29 


Richmond, William T., 


59 


Olin, Russell A., 


41 


Robert, Alexander J., 


9 


Olney, James N., 


16 


Rogers, Horatio, Jr., 


19 


Pabodie, Benjamin F., 
Paine, Robert H., 


33 
54 


Rogers, John W., 
Rogers, William B. , 


38 
24 


Parker, Addison, 


41 


Sackett, Frederic M., 


38 


Parkhurst, Charles H., 


12 


Sanborn, Mattson C, 


52 


Parsons, Henry C, 


17 


Sanders, Nathaniel T., 


52 


Patten, George W., 


1 


Sanger, Eugene, 


52 


Pearce, William W., 


7 


Saterlee, Livingston, 


33 


Peck, George B., 


52 


Saunders, Isaac H., 


42 


Peckham, Stephen F., 


38 


Sayles, Willard, 


6 


Peckham, Alexander, 


46 


Scott, Livingston, 


47 


Pell, Duncan A., 


47 


Seagrave, Orville B., 


47 


Perkins, Joseph, 


29 


Sears, Edward H., 


42 


Perry, Charles H., 


29 


Shaw, George W., 


54 


Phelps, Charles, 


19 


Shearman, Sumner U., 


39 


Phelps, Henry, 


29 


Shurtleflf, A. Judson, 


52 


Phillips, Duncan C. , 


38 


Shiere, Peter B., 


60 


Pierce, Edward L,., 


10 


Smith, Amos D., Jr., 


17 


Pitman, Joseph S., 


3 


Smith, Charles M., 


30 


Poinier, Samuel T., 


30 


Smith, John D., 


61 



INDEX. 



69 



Smith, Martin S. , 58 

Smith, T. Delap, 52 

Smith, Welcome A., 54 

Smith, William S., 34 

Snow, Charles A., 19 

Snyder, Henry N. , 19 

South wick, Henry K., 39 

Spencer, William H., 56 

Spooner, Henry J. , 34 

Starkweather, Samuel, 22 

Steere, Hebron H., 54 

Stiness, John H., 39 

Stone, James R., 3 

Stone, Josiah P., 24 

Stone, l/ucien B,, 39 

Storrs, Melancthon, 13 

Sullivan, John C, 58 

Taft, Orsmus, 47 

Tefft, JohnE., 34 

Tetlow, John, 52 

Thayer, Caleb E., 54 

Thayer, John M., 4 

Thurber, Samuel, 27 

Thurston, Robert H., 30 

Tillman, William, 17 

Tingley, Xenophon D., 58 

Tobey, John F., 20 

Tobey, Thomas F., 30 

Tourtellotte, Isaac N., 9 

Tourtellotte, John E., 22 

Tower, Levi A., 31 

Train, Charles R., 2 

Trull, Washington B., 39 

Tucker, John H., 8 

Turner, William M., 20 

Tyler, Francis M,, 52 

Underbill, William H., 53 

Underwood, Adin B., 9 



Van Buren, Abram, 5 

Vernon, Thomas, 17 

Waite, Clarendon, 13 

Walker, Levi C. , 55 

Walker, Louis O., 53 

Ward, Joseph, 55 

Warren, Andrew F., 48 

Warren, Orestes, 20 

Washburn, Albert G., 34 

Waterman, Richard, 31 

Waterman, Richard, 48 

Waterman, Rufus, 55 

Watson, ElishaF., 4 

Wayland, H. Lincoln, 9 

Weeden, William B., 8 

Wells, Amos P., 22 

Wheaton, Frank, 11 

Wheelock, Lucius A., 13 

Whipple, John, 34 

White, John B., 2 

Whitney, Alfred B., 61 

Whittier, Edward N., 42 

Wightman, Joseph C, 13 

Williams, Alfred M., 34 

Williams, Alonzo, 60 

Williams, James C, 39 

Williams, Jared J., 17 

Wilson, Isaac G., 3 

Winchester, Benjamin F., 20 

Winchester, Joseph R., 17 

Winn, Henry A., 58 

Witter, William C, 55 

Woodbury, Josiah G., 24 

Woodman, Prentiss M., 60 

Woods, George H., 14 

Woodward, George T., 42 



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Deacidified using the Bookkeeper process. 
Neutralizing Agent. Magnesium Oxide 
Treatment Date; 

DCl '937 




HBKKEEPER 

PRESERVATION TECHNOLOGIES. INC, 



1 1 1 Thomson Park Drive 
CrantMrry Twp., PA 16066 
(412)779-2111 



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